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i got married eight years ago

i had a baby almost three years ago

i moved into a house with my husband for the first time six years ago

i turned 40 almost two years ago

i found my first gray pubic hair ten years ago

i got my first pair of reading glasses less than a year ago

but

it wasn’t until today that i truly felt old.

i felt old because i opted to spend the day going grocery shopping and mundane-life-doing with neil and ash instead of going to the march for our lives. i felt old because i don’t feel connected to my old self anymore.

i was there until i wasn't.

i felt old because i used to go to protests all the time in boston and now i sometimes feel like i live in the woods in a stranger's skin, like i’ve become a placid, domesticated farm animal. i felt old because the entire day went by and neil and i didn’t talk about the march, not once. i felt old because instead, we went to our friends' house and ash played with a cat and ate pizza. i felt old because i used to wake up and fight for my beliefs with my feet and my throat and now i feel like i fight for my beliefs using twitter.

however. i know that all of this is in my head.

i have to say, one thing saved me from all this.

the fact that i took $15k from my patreon last month (from the new version of “strength through music": https://youtu.be/WZgQ8-lYX7o and donated it to the march...and not just the fact that the money and energy went into helping all of this happen, but because it came through the vessel of art, and you. i was in australia when the women’s march happened and i joined in sydney...with ash. it was incredible. but also hard. having a two year old is hard. having a marriage that involves both people traveling is hard.

but....you guys know me. i don’t actually feel fucking old at ALL. i feel present, i feel like me, i feel like my life has changed and blindsided me and actually, i feel like all the practice i’ve been doing my whole life to prepare me for these moments of detachment and non-judgment are bearing fruit.

i feel old, but i feel fine. i AM old. i’m 41. when i was 24 i used to look at people who were 41 and think they were officially old.

and i can see it blaring from the headlines: i may be old, but kids are alright. i feel old but i also feel that subtle powerfulness in letting go and knowing that my spot in the circle is shifting. the truly wise old people i know seem wise because they evolve into the future; they cling to very little.

my power, what i’m able to do, what i know, how that knowledge helps...it’s shifted considerably in the last few years. where i used to have time, i now have so little. spontaneity has been replaced by a cautious and annoying but necessary conservatism about my hours and how i mete them out.

where i used to have naked naive ambition, i now have a kind of placid realism about what can lead to what and why.

and though i’m often surprised when things aren’t what they appeared to be, i’m no longer surprised that i’m surprised.

the grooves of life have etched themselves into my face, my hands, my decisions. my decisions are, at long last, totally, irrefutably groovy.

neil probably became his version of old many years ago. but to be fair, he had his first batch of kids in his early twenties and i don’t think he ever went to a protest in his life. i spent my twenties at rallies and marches. i had time.

i remember my mother saying to me, when i was a teenager learning about the 60s and asking her about whether she was a hippie and whether she went to woodstock and whether she was a part of the summer of love. i will never forget how she looked sad as she told me that she missed it all by a few years. i was married, she said, in the mid-sixties, my husband joined the navy, we were stationed in nowhere, georgia....we had two small children...you could almost see her looking through the window of the kitchen as a parade of naked women in day-glo bodypaint and flower-garlands paraded by the picket fence, tossing their flaming bras into the trash-can in the yard where she’d deposited the bones of last night's chicken a la king.

that’s my head, not hers. maybe i project.

but that’s always been my nightmare, i suppose, and it was my nightmare when i struggled with the question of whether or not to have a baby.

that i would miss the world too much.

today, i missed the world.

i tuned into the internet when we got home and shared the beautiful beautiful photos and videos and stories from all over my feeds and i felt better.

and so...if you happened to make it out to the march today, do me a solid.

tell me (and us) the story, so i don’t miss the world so much.

and wherever you marched, i was there...in spirit. you not only marched for gun control, but you marched for me, while i had to step out of the world for a moment, in my own march of toddler and marriage time and space.

i’m not dead yet.

i’ll be at the next one.

i love you.

tell me your stories.

(also: the relaunch of the patreon....i have no words, all. it’s been incredible).

for those outside the loop/the USA, here's more on the march:

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/24/us/march-for-our-lives.html


yours in endless evolving groove,

x
afp

.....


------THE NEVER-ENDING AS ALWAYS---------

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2. see All the Things i've made so far on patreon: http://amandapalmer.net/patreon-things

3. join the official AFP-patron facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/afpland

4. new to my music and TOTALLY OVERWHELMED? TAKE A WALK THROUGH AMANDALANDA….we made a basic list of my greatest hits n stuff on this lovely page: http://amandalanda.amandapalmer.net/

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Comments

Anonymous

Amanda, thank you for sharing where you are at - I hear you and see you. I am a childless late 40something so I may have more freedom than if I'd been able to have kids, but I've had a really bad few years emotionally and in terms of my mental health due to toxic situations and the political situation. I'm gently coming out the other side now with the help of loving husband, friends and family (those who know anyway). I want to think I'm still the teen who can do anything and beat anything, but I have to respect my body, mind and psyche, and just offer support where I can't offer direct action or have to step away from the news because I'm still fragile. You are an inspiration to so many, including me. See you in Edinburgh, awesome woman <3

Anonymous

Dear Amanda, my english is not the best, but i ```ll try. First of all... Thank you! I`m a mother too and often I read what you are doing and think to myselft: Wow! How is she doing this? Where comes the energie from? And than I feel exactly like you do, if you know, there are woman marching for something. To say it with the Byrds: "To Everything (Turn, Turn, Turn) There is a season (Turn, Turn, Turn) And a time to every purpose, under Heaven" My children are older, and I have more spare time to do politics, and things I think that have to be done. You inspire so many people because you are creating incredible art, because you are twittering, because of you are not tired to talk about stuff. I tell you, you will march again!

Anonymous

I read it and it was beautiful. I'm getting old too. Rather than looking back on the things I've missed, I'm just starting to live my life and pursue the things I'm actually interested in and not just responsibilities. I waited so long and I don't even really understand why I was so afraid to begin. But here I am finally going to college and I have my own patreon too, filled with silly paintings and doodles. Thanks for sharing your view point - you are a beautiful writer. It was truly nice to read about some else's wants and feelings of getting old. xoxo

Anonymous

I went to part of the rally in Civic Center, San Francisco. Great, Big crowd - all kinds of people, from all ages, all races, great hand-lettered signs. I then went into the library and went home.

Anonymous

We all do what we can. I Loved the speeches of these people hooking the racial profiling of black teenagers to police violence to control of women (signs saying "my uterus is more regulated than a gun"). I'm So Inspired I could cry. This is the most activity a lot of us have seen in years, and, of course, it's so threatening to the powers that be. But, many of us get tired sometimes. It's ok to spend time with our loved ones! I know you're committed to what's right, and I love your music. That "strength through music" video was brilliant

Anonymous

My 16 year old twin daughters went with a busload of Vermonters to the march in DC. They could have just gone to the march in Montpelier, but they went to the big one. The Ben & Jerry's Foundation paid for the bus. I would have preferred you to Ariana Grande for entertaining the crowd, but the kids were stoked and so was Ariana.

Anonymous

This post was very comforting for me. I kind of fell in love with your voice and what you do with it a few months ago when I accidently found your stuff on bandcamp (the song that first caught me was Leeds United), had a look at some of your other music on YouTube, and at some point in March became a patron. And I have to say that I find you quite … intimidating. Everything you do has this aura of strength, power, and commitment to it. Reading that even for you “having a 2-year-old child is hard” kind of seems to mitigate the trouble that I am currently having with my own 2-year-old and the half-year-old. And the travelling (in our case, it's only me who's doing business travel, and I guess to a rather small extent, but still…). I too miss the world sometimes, although in other terms that you do. I have never been much of a demo-goer, or otherwise politically active.

Anonymous

Oops, wrong button. Well, long story short, I guess what I mainly wanted to say is a) I think I can understand you to some extent, b) Wow where do you get all this power from, and c) Thank you.

Anonymous

Beautiful read. Thank you Amanda

Anonymous

I am 43 and had my first child 5 years ago. Everything you said resonates with me. Even the part about asking your mother about the 60s and how she missed out. (mine was way too conservative to have done any of that, but I know she regrets it). I missed the March because I was with my child and my husband doing the domestic things that need done. And I felt old. Thanks for posting this. We're going to be okay.

Skyeanna Malito

I was feeling the same way. I'm pregnant and I just could not physically do it. I wanted so badly to, and I felt so guilty all day. But I supported my friends who went, and I will make it to the next one.

Anonymous

You're so young -- you'll know that when you are as old as I am (74, which is not that old, either). Once you have children, it changes your energy, and it also changes your obligations. Some people just ignore the family obligations -- see the book by Joe Slovo and Ruth First's daughter, who was very bitter about their activism. But most pull bak a little bit. What I found telling in your post is that you and Neil didn't talk about the march. I think you were feeling guilty you weren't there -- but don't feel that way! We all do what we can, and you've done a lot. My wife and I only did the first part of the March for our Lives here because we had a hair appointment! There were reasons to do that, so it didn't bother us when we did it.