“Not in Assisted Living (Yet): Dispatches from the Edge of Independence!

Welcome to my World---Woman, widow, senior citizen seeking to live out my days with a sense of whimsy as I search for inner peace and friendships. Jeez, that sounds like a profile on a dating app and I have zero interest in them, having lost my soul mate of 42 years. Life was good until it wasn't when my husband had a massive stroke and I spent the next 12 1/2 years as his caregiver. This blog has documented the pain and heartache of loss, my dark humor, my sweetest memories and, yes, even my pity parties and finally, moving past it all. And now I’m ready for a new start, in a new location---a continuum care campus in West Michigan, U.S.A. Some people say I have a quirky sense of humor that shows up from time to time in this blog. Others say I make some keen observations about life and growing older. Stick around, read a while. I'm sure we'll have things in common. Your comments are welcome and encouraged. Jean

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

My Mid‑80s Crisis: Retail Therapy and a Pot of Living Stones


Feeling like you’re running out of time isn’t just for the young or the old—it hits most people eventually. When Jean’s youngest niece admitted she feels it too, it sent Jean down a rabbit hole of time anxiety, grief, retail therapy, and a surprising new obsession. Between missing her husband, worrying about the state of the country, and trying to make peace with unfinished goals, Jean found herself unexpectedly comforted by a tiny plant called a Living Stone that could easily outlive most of her readers.  AI…..

My youngest niece asked me a question that startled me. “Do you ever feel like you’re running out of time?” And before I could answer she went on to say, “I do. There’s still a lot of things I want to do.”

“Welcome to my world,” I replied, “but you’re too young to start feeling that way.” I didn’t say it out loud but I briefly considered checking her hands for liver spots.

We are twenty-one years apart in age, but she and her husband have both had health scares in the last few years, so I suppose it’s natural for her to experience a feeling I assumed was only common among my peers. If it’s even common in people in their 80s. I never hear anyone talking about it here in my continuum care community, but then it’s rare when a serious conversation ever takes place other than with my Tuesday night dinner group. And I miss talking in depth. I had that with my husband, and I seem to be missing him a lot right now. He’s been gone for eleven years, and you’d think missing him would get less intense rather than more. I’ve been dreaming about him, too. But it’s the anniversary month of his passing so—duh!—maybe this acute missing him will lessen when the calendar page turns. If not, I’m going to start charging him rent for waltzing around in my head.

Back on topic: I sure feel that pressure of running out of time. Every day. It’s like a wild animal chasing me into a dark forest. Google’s AI says, “Feeling like you're running out of time, or time anxiety, is common and stems from stress, pressure to achieve, or feeling overwhelmed; it can be managed by prioritizing, setting boundaries…” etc., etc.

Prioritizing. Set boundaries. If only it were that easy. Back in my prime I could time‑manage and prioritize the crap out of any job, and I didn’t need to set boundaries because I really thought I could do it all. After all, I was young and had all the time in the world to reach my life goals. But I no longer have all the time in the world, and 95% of the time I've made peace with the fact that some of my life goals have to pass me by, unfulfilled.

And maybe someone out there in cyberspace can tell me how you manage your time when you don’t know how much you have left before you kick the proverbial bucket. Do I start that quilt I know will take two years to complete? Do I buy that new storage cabinet I’ve been lusting after, knowing I’m adding to the job my nieces will have to do when I die or get downgraded to assisted living or memory care? I can almost hear them muttering, “Why did she need upgrade that light-weight plastic storage cabinet for this wooden one that weighs a ton?”

It doesn’t help that the universal values I always took for granted about our country seem to have evaporated, forcing me to feel like I have to join the fight to get them back in place before I die—adding one more goal to the pile I’ve already heaped on myself. The past two weeks my restlessness has reached new heights, and I’ve done what I’ve rarely done in the past to combat the anxiety of running out of time: I did what Dawn over at the Bohemian Valhalla blog calls “Retail Therapy.” That’s when you buy stuff you don’t need but you buy it anyway because it temporarily fills a hole and/or improves your mood. Can we all agree that it’s probably cheaper than traditional therapy​?

And what have I over‑indulged in shopping for? It started with one $10 plant—a Living Stone—I found at a local garden center. Before I knew it, I was ordering two pots of these South African odd little things online. They can live 40 to 50 years in the same pot, if you don’t manage to kill them with kindness. I’ve become obsessed, and by the time I bought the succulent soil and pumice to amend it, the right size pots (they need to be six inches deep to accommodate their tap roots), and a cute little succulent tool kit—plus some other succulents I fell in love with along the way—I’d spent nearly a hundred dollars. That was my wake‑up call that it was time to rein myself in, and when I realized some people might thing It’s odd that I was buying plants with a longer life expectancy than I have. In the meantime, I get to watch my latest (and hopefully last) purchase travel across the country during the coldest snap of the season and hope the plants doesn’t die of frostbite along the way.

The photo at the top is the way my Living Stones look before I repotted them into their homes for the next half‑century—assuming I can keep them alive and I find someone to extract a promise from to take one of these pots when I die. My youngest niece likes succulents, and I’m giving her the bottom pot. 

I was showing that photo around the farm table last night at dinner, and one of the ladies was strongly hinting that she’d like one of my “stones.” I was playing dumb and not picking up on the hint. She was offering me a couple of leaves off her Aloe Vera plant to root in exchange. But I’d just spent the afternoon transplanting themsee the photo at the far bottom—and I figured they’d been through enough. Those poor things were probably travel traumatized after getting shoved into a dark box then having to leave a warm nursery and ending up in Widowland during single digit temperatures where I ripped them apart from their buddies.

Anyway, if you’re still reading this, you’ll be happy to know I think the retail therapy worked. Buying Living Stones is like planting a tree you know you won’t live long enough to sit under. And that’s okay. I may not be able to leave behind the same kind of democracy I was born into but, by golly, I will leave something good behind.

And just in case you’re wondering where the expression “by golly” comes from: in the 1770s a writer named Gilbert White noted that working‑class people were using it as a euphemism for “God.” Now, aren’t you glad you read to the very end to learn that useless bit of information? If nothing else you can use this tidbit on trivia night.  ©

 See you next Wednesday. 

 Living Stones in their natural habitat in South Africa. 

 

Living Stones don't get any taller than one inch but they also "climb" on top of each making them look taller. They also spit open and will produce a daisy like flower on a short stem that last from 4 to 6 weeks. 

My Living Stones after I repotted them. 

23 comments:

  1. It isn't just the feeling of running out of time (which I think many of us "of an age" are beginning to think. It's also the body (and possibly resources) running out of steam to do what we want in that time. Take a walking tour through the Cotswolds? A lovely thought but not happening. More likely a bus tour if I get there at all. Travel? Not as easy as it used to be. It isn't what we planned. I like your idea of living stones. I've never heard of this but they are pretty cool Can you just ignore them? I am murder on houseplants. Every month or so I throw a glass of water on my jade plant. It's the only plant I love and I feel I am probably being extra cruel by not doing that twice a month. I'm wintering my geraniums and wondering if I'll just get tired of it and toss them in the bin!

    I say buy the plants. Buy the cabinet. They'll take care of it, not your problem, and probably glad to do it. They might even want it. We can't take it with us and while we have to save enough to be secure for the next batch of care, if we're not living our best lives while we can, doing what we can, we're missing something big.

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    1. Of course, you are right. The running out of money when you can't make anymore enters into the equation, even when you don't consciously think it doesn't. The physical "get-up and go," as mom used to say, "got up and left." I seem to get this way every January and I don't recognize the connection to my husband's passing until I sit down and write about it.

      Thanks for the comment, oh, and watering a jade plant once a month is probably enough. If the leaves are 'puffy' its in good shape. They store their water in their leaves so you can tell easily if the succulent is stressed by lack of water. The Living Stones need a lot of light. On these dark days I've had mine under a lamp.

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    2. The Cotswolds are pretty, but full of tourists

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  2. I think most of us have these thoughts at time but none of us knows how long we have left! If the present you will be happy to acquire or do something that you can afford I'd say go for it. We live in the present after all.

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    1. Thanks for the reminder I try too, but I've always been a long term planner. Got it from my mom growing up and then twenty years dealing with brides cemented that trait into my personality.

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  3. Anniversaries are hard. My dad and my sister both died in January, and it just makes this dreary month harder. Retail therapy to the rescue! (I'm on it!)

    Have never heard of Living Stones. How interesting. And don't you just love people who hint (or outright ask) for something you have? Good grief.

    Lately I do have that sense of limited time, which I didn't really feel until I hit 70 But I think a couple pretty serious health problems among my (younger) siblings are also fueling that sense. Doesn't seem to motivate me yet, but it could be the cold and snow that are freezing me in place right now.

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    1. Two sadiversaries in one month is a lot, especially when Mother Nature seems to be mirroring our feelings. I can recommend retail shopping. I did mine mostly online which added an extra distraction as I used delivery tracking to follow stuff.

      Yes, the woman never asked where I bought them or how much they cost, but she wouldn't drop it. She even went so far as to say she'd have to buy a pot. I didn't tell her one stone would not look good in a 6 inch deep pot. Instead I tried to change the subject.

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  4. I just figure when it is my time to die, then I will die. I've had a good life and a long enough life and I know my kids and grandkids will be fine without me.

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    1. You are really in a good head space. When I grow up you will be my role model.

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  5. What an interesting new hobby!

    I think January is always a grey month for most of us. Lack of sun, house looks empty after putting the Christmas decor away and it's hard to look forward. Mr. Ralph was deeply affected by glum in January. I used to think it was because his birthday was the end of the month. Heading back into the routine of less going on is also affecting my cheerfulness.

    I might paint some rocks and leave them outside in unusual places for others to find. Probably not. I'd have to go out into the peoply world to do that.

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    1. I have done bat-sh*t crazy over succulents in the past few weeks. I'd hate to tell you how many I've accumulated and have leaves off from to propagate. I used to work at a florist that had a four acre nursery attached so I think I'm just going back to my roots. I always loved watching the babies grow.

      During covid little girls (I assumed) left painted rocks in my mailbox and they really did brighten my days. I have not tried doing it because I love rocks just they way they are. I have tons of stones in my apartment.

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  6. My last little dog died in 2024 just before Thanksgiving. I'd had him for about 14 years and pretty much thought that was going to be it for me for dog ownership. But I ended up adopting a Chiweenie from our local SPCA shelter. She's around 2 years old and came from a hoarding situation. I figure I have to stay alive for her sake. lol

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    1. I envy you! I would love another dog and I can have one here but only if I have two people who they can call to come get the dog if something should happened to me. I'd be lucky if I could take one person in my family to do it, let alone two. They are such a wonderful source for affection, love and adding purpose to our lives.

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  7. The Living Stones were interesting. I don't have succulents, but I always admire them. You made me want to get some, but like a junkie, somebody mentions plants, and I start drooling. Apartment living makes you consider each purchase in terms of both space and money.

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  8. That is one wise niece. I feel like that about books and travel. Will I be able to read everything I want to read and see everything I want to see? But I'd don't think about it too much. The living rocks are pretty cool.

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    1. Is there are reader anywhere on earth that ever thinks they'll live long enough to read all the books on their want list? I don't know any.

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  9. Your post really hit home with me. The sense of time passing and our future getting short, definitely is on my mind a lot, as I am days away from being 79.
    I’m widowed no children, but I have some good friends that I see frequently. I live in my home which I love and I do garden, which is my hobby and the fact that I’m in Florida makes it quite easy, pretty much year around.
    My gardening is really landscaping around the outside of my home but lately I too, have been buying succulents. They can handle the heat on my lanai a lot better than regular plants and they are so varied and pretty. I have not heard of these living stones, but if I see some, I’m gonna buy some.
    I also have lots of squirrels and birds around and the occasional rabbit and armadillo.
    I think about my parents a lot still and they’ve been gone over 30 years because they were wonderful. My marriage had some ups and downs. I don’t like thinking about it too much because it can upset me.
    What bothers me most about dying is the dread of never existing again. For some reason that really gets to me and I’m not religious so there’s that.
    I agree, buy more plants by the piece of furniture you want and whatever else strikes your fancy. You can’t take it with you and it will give you pleasure is only another year or less. Mary

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    1. I often speculate that it's because I don't have children that its bothers me so much that I'm running out of time. Parents have their children and grandkids to give them a legacy...proof that they lived and contributed something of value.

      Never existing again is a scary though. I'm not religious either but believe our bodies become part of the ecosystem. We will live again but not in the same form as we do now.

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  10. Today is the 2nd anniversary of my granddaughter’s death. Those anniversaries sneak up on you and you are never prepared in how you will handle them. A young mom, wife, daughter, sister, and granddaughter gone to soon.

    I am not a plant person as there is not a live plant in my house. Guess I missed out on the green thumb gene, but glad you got it. Shopping has become less of a want and turned to a need. I don’t get the same thrill I used to either. It’s enough to go to the grocery store and decide what is the best deal and will my husband eat it.

    Thanks for making Wednesday’s one of my favorite as waking up and reading your blog brings me joy.

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    1. So sorry about your granddaughter. That's very recent in grieving time. You are right about how the anniversaries sneak up on us. I usually find out they are bothering me when I sit down to write a blog post in January. Writing is always how I've processed my feelings.

      I worked around a plant nursery for a decade and I'm enjoying how easy it is to make baby plants from succulents. Once they get bigger, I have no idea what I'm going to do with them all.

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  11. Jean : its amazing your niece thinks about that, I guess since I never made goals or made in plans in lie maybe cause I am go with flow kind of person, Onlyst goal in my life was to become engineer when I was young & for that I prepared rest was just doing the next step get a job, get married have kids, just go with flow, now since retirement deciding to learn AI & use it in my programming keeps me entertained in life no major goals, just wake up have coffee, just take one day at a time no big planning. Just do every day what makes me happy & for ne working on my project makes me happy dont know if this project will be widely used by me amd ,y fsmily & may make me rich & famous, but it does make me happy trying to do something with help of AI keeps me excited about life.
    Asha

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    1. You're going to like my next post. Don't miss it. It's a heavy dose of AI. I truly love it the more I use it. With your engineering background I can see why you do too. If I was younger I'd want to do a deep dive into what it can and can't do.

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