I’m looking forward to my 50s, perhaps because my 40s were the decade in which I truly began to live. It was in my 40s that I confronted my insecurities, endured heartbreaks, and experienced immense loss. I lost many of the people who truly loved me, and I nearly lost myself during the pandemic. I faced grief. I faced death. I faced the difficult truths of who I am, what I deserve, and what I can and cannot tolerate.
My 40s taught me that life is beautiful—even in its darkest moments. And if there is one thing I am utterly certain of, it is that nothing lasts forever. Everything is transient. And I don’t just mean happiness fading; even sadness must eventually leave to make space for joy. Life moves in cycles. That, I think, is the greatest lesson of the past decade—the understanding that permanence is an illusion.
I once believed that some things would always hold, while others would inevitably fall apart. But I have come to realise that even truth wavers with time, space, and circumstance. Life, by its very nature, is constantly evolving—and so have I. That is why I look forward to the next decade, because I know I will keep evolving. I am not someone who remains stagnant or gives in to complacency.
I have come to understand that the things that truly matter are not grand achievements but the small moments that bring joy. Whether it’s love, relationships, something abstract or something tangible—like playing a video game, walking on the beach, or simply stroking the head of a pet as they rest in your lap—if it brings you happiness, then it is worth embracing. It has never been the big things that mattered most. I learned this long ago—not just in my 40s, but through a slow and gradual process of self-awareness.
The things I have worked hardest to achieve—genuine human connections, staying true to myself, and being honest with the world about who I am—have always been the most important to me. I began that journey at a very young age, and by the time I reached my 40s, everything started falling into place.
Now, as I step into my 50s, I feel assured of who I am. And yet, I know I can still become better. That, perhaps, is the most exciting part—that no matter what life throws my way, I will rise above it. I will endure it. And I will grow from it.








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