Midlife Crisis
The moment everyone hopes will never happen.
Everyone has their own way of dealing with it, and women are no exception. Some buy a new car, and some desperately try to make themselves look and act younger than they actually are.
While I disapprove, there are even some women who will have an affair behind their spouse’s back (if they are married) and destroy what they worked so hard for as a result. It all goes back to one fact about most women: no woman ever wants to accept that they are getting old, and so the mid-life crisis and time of suffering begins. It is good that this is usually just a temporary phase for most people.
Not many women like cars, but the few especially enjoy them in their mid-life crisis. One of my friends who recently went through her crisis bought a van and painted it green and blue, making it look like a real-life Scooby Doo mystery van. It made her feel rejuvenated and youthful.
Again, this goes back to her wanting to be young: during the crisis, she wanted to try and return to her youth, which made her so jovial and happy. Fortunately, roughly six months later, she regained her self-control and embraced her age. Her mid-life crisis ended on a happy note; she learned from her experience and saw that her life was not so bad now, even if she was no longer a young 25-year-old girl.
Most mid-life crises are not like this for women. Sometimes, trying to be young is much more complex and has much more dire consequences for women. To make themselves look younger, these older women begin taking extreme measures: breast implants, face lifts, and more. This is much worse than just dressing “too young.” At least when you dress young, you can change the clothes and finish it: with surgery, once it is done, it cannot be undone, and you may very well hurt your body.
Having an affair is just as bad: if you have one, you will destroy a marriage and possibly shatter the lives of your children and, sadly, in the long run, your life, too. You will be labeled a cheating whore for the rest of your life, and no woman ever wishes to have that happen.
The midlife crisis can become one’s ultimate downfall; people need to try to think clearly before acting. Otherwise, it may just destroy them.
The midlife crisis always ends in one of two ways: enlightening or disastrous. For most women, their midlife crisis story ends happily, and for the rest, I give my condolences, hoping someday you can find happiness. I can only imagine how hard it would be if I were a man and went through such an ordeal.
The midlife crisis does not happen to everyone, but it is good to learn from those who have gone through one so that we may hopefully be better prepared for it when it does.