Staying Fully Alive

clock3.jpgI wonder…

 
I wonder why it is that some people manage to stay alive and vibrant all their lives.  Meanwhile, others seem to have their "moment" and then the remainder of their lives they seem to be idling in traffic.

 
John Gardner, former Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, spoke at the commencement ceremony at Stanford University on June 16, 1991.  In the middle ’60s, Gardner wrote a book, entitled Self-Renewal, that dealt with the decay and the renewal of societies, organizations, and individuals.  He reflected on this in his commencement speech and said:

I explored the question of why civilizations die and how they sometime renew themselves, and the puzzle of why some men and women go to seed while others remain vital all of their lives… I’m talking about people who have stopped learning or growing or trying… I do worry about men and women functioning far below the level of their possibilities… As you settle into your adult lives, you cannot write off the danger of complacency, boredom, and a growing rigidity, imprisoned by your own comfortable habits and opinions.  A famous French writer once said, "There are people whose clocks stop at a certain point in their lives."

Unfortunately, some people have clocks that stopped a long time ago.  Perhaps at 40, 50, or 60 years of age, a kind of dullness set in.  For whatever reason, they began to shut down.  Then there are other people who have never stopped laughing, growing, learning, and asking questions. 

 
I’m curious.  Is there someone in your world who has managed to remain fully alive through the years?  What do you notice about them?  How do they seem to stay fully alive?