by KIRSTY RICE
I went through a stage in my mid twenties where I really wished I could have gone back and started again. I was sure I could have been a better student. I would have worked harder, well, I would have actually DONE some work.
I would have learnt a language, done my math homework and actually read the books that I wrote essays about. If I could have gone back and started again, I just knew I would have been in a better place.
It wasn’t just the regrets. Sure, I would never have kissed the guy with the hush puppy shoes, and I would have remembered to pull the dress out of the back of my stockings BEFORE I walked into the year twelve formal dance, but there was more to it.
I would have gone back and been nicer to myself. I would have looked at myself in the mirror and said “WOW”. I would have told myself that the freckles were fine, that my size was just perfect, and I would have grabbed my thighs not to be horrified by their girth but amazed by their muscle tone.
G and I went to renew our passports yesterday. We don’t have an Australian Embassy in Qatar, which means we wait for the consulate representatives to make their monthly visit. G was already seated at the table when I arrived, a familiar plastic packet of birth certificates and translated documents spread in front of him.
Our marriage certificate was there, with six different birth certificates from an array of countries. As I flick through the contents a little explosive flashback triggers with each one, a different hospital bed, a different accent or language to decipher.
I opened my passport to see a completely different me. The photo was taken in a camera store in Libya. I remember the trepidation of driving down Gargaresh road and searching amongst the Arabic signed shopfronts for a Fuji or a Kodak sign. I remember the smiles from the men behind the counter as I entered with a stroller and two small children.
“Passport photo? Australian?” I hand them my print out of Australian passport rules, and point to the section that explains the necessary background colour and size.
The second little traveller is strapped to my front and there is a stilted conversation where we struggle between English and Arabic on whether I can keep her attached to me while I have the shot taken. We agree the straps of the baby bjorn will show in the picture and I’ll need someone to hold her while we take the shot.
Without any thought I remove her and pass her to a young man behind the counter, and she is immediately the centre of attention. Three men crowd around her desperately trying to win what appears to be a smile off. I rearrange my shirt and run my hand over my tummy as I stand for the shot and the photographer realizes I’m pregnant.
He points to the first traveller in her stroller, and holds up a single finger, he then points to the second and holds up another, he then points to my stomach and questions “three?”
“Yes, there’s going to be three.” I’m giggling but I’m terrified.
“You are blessed,” he tells me.
When I think of that time, only nine years ago, I think of babies, toddlers, wading pools and nursery rhymes. The happy times, the dinner parties, the road trips, the homemade booze and the friends. The sad times, the goodbyes, the reign of Ghaddafi, the worry of how I will physically travel with three children under the age of four.
I think about how exhausting some of those days were. I think about laying in a wading pool in searing temperatures, my pregnant tummy emerging out of the water while I made jokes about my predicament. This whale was well and truly beached.
But now, as I sit nine years older without a baby in sight, I return to look at that skin, that hair, the undeniable freshness of being nearly ten years younger, and realize once again, at that moment in time, I was possibly the best me I would be. Did I make the most of it? I hope so.
Nine years on and there are some extra lines, added kilos and oh god, are they the beginning of jowls?
“Where’s that girl?” I asked, referring to my passport photo.
“Honey, you look the same, you just have a few more stories to tell” said my very generous friend Jen.
And then it clicked.
In another ten years, I will return to look at a different passport photo, in ten years time I will look ten years older, because that’s the way it’s meant to be. Right now though, it’s time to appreciate exactly what’s on offer today.
The best me that I’ll possibly ever be.
This post originally appeared on Kirsty’s blog here, and has been republished with full permission.
Kirsty Rice is an Australian writer and Blogger currently living in Qatar. After calling 7 countries home over the past 11 years she’s embarrassed to admit she still can’t pack a suitcase properly. Visit Kirsty’s blog here.
What do you look back on that makes you feel really lucky today but perhaps you didn’t appreciate at the time?








Comments
33 Comments so far
Beautiful post!
What a great reminder to appreciate who I am right now, in my 40s. I shall stop looking at my changes with regret and will appreciate my fit, healthy body
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Wow, it never ceases to amaze me how often I visit this site to find an article that specifically deals with a situation I myself am contemplating in my own life.
My sentiments exactly. I am struggling to lose some weight mostly gained through medication necessary to treat my illness. I used to be model, I worked regularly for Elle McPherson’s underwear brand. In hindsight, if that was not a validation for having a great body, I don’t know what is. At the time I remember not being able to stand looking at myself in the mirror at times, I remember being scared stiff at photoshoots, convinced my flaws would be pointed out, noticed and that I’d be sent home, with my agent being told I was not worthy.
Looking back with the 20/20 benefit of hindsight, I actually laugh at those insecurities and think what an idot I as not to embrace being in great shape. What I wouldn’t give now to have that body. Sad.
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It did occur to me once that (looking back on one’s life) there must have been a day that I looked the best I was ever going to look – ever.
Was I walking to the shops ? Doing the washing ? Arriving at work ? Cuddling our kids? Cooking dinner ? …….and did I realise it ? – hopefully not…..
Looking back at old photos I’d have to say that my mid-twenties were the time I felt the most confident, but because I’d been a chubby kid (despite the 3 times weekly dance classes and the weekend bush and beach rambles) – I still felt FAT.
Isn’t it terrible what early programming does to people ?
It robs them of the joy of appreciating their good fortune when they have it.
We should all be truly careful of the negative things we say to people – including ourselves and not forget to live in the moment.
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For some reason, this story gave me little goosebumps and nearly even a tear in my eyes. I completely understand where Kirsty is coming from and I have had exactly the same thoughts. Kirsty, you make me want to make the most of the now, too. thank you. x
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Charlie, that was such a nice comment to make – thank you, you’ve just made my day. xx
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I appreciate the sentiment of the article, but I can’t help thinking about my own Mum, who is more gorgeous, stylish and fit now in her sixties than she ever was in her thirties. I don’t believe in the ‘it’s all downhill from here’ attitude expressed here.
Sure, appreciate yourself exactly as you are now, because you’ll never get your youth back, but there’s always hope for the future too!
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I have great plans to be just like your mother – I’d love to be fitter than I am now. Thanks for the inspiration.
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My nana always used to say: today you are the youngest you will ever be.
Reading this story makes me want to remember nana’s words daily.
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An eighty year old women recently old me a similar thing. Appreciate how gorgeous you are today, because in twenty years time you’ll look at photos and say “look how beautiful I looked then..’
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I spent all my teen years and 20s obsessed with being too fat, not toned enough, not tall enough, not tanned enough. Now I look at photos and think, damn, I was almost hot!! I could have rocked that bikini instead of hiding under a sarong! Two kids and many kilos later I think, why do we never appreciate what we have until it’s gone?!
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I almost didn’t read this because of the headline “Body Image” ..I am so over that term.
But what a great post!
It reminds me of The Sunscreen Song:
“Enjoy the power and beauty of your youth; oh nevermind; you will not
understand the power and beauty of your youth until they have faded.
But trust me, in 20 years you’ll look back at photos of yourself and
recall in a way you can’t grasp now how much possibility lay before
you and how fabulous you really looked….You’re not as fat as you
imagine. “
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Yes, a beautiful message. All during my twenties I self-consciously hid my body in baggy clothes – always embarrassed and ashamed of my body. Since having children I realise how lucky I am to have a healthy, functioning, strong body. I’m the happiest and most comfortable I have ever been in my skin and it is important to relish that.
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liked this one a lot
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Its always worthwhile being reminded to appreciate what we have!! I was actually just saying to my partner the other day that I feel like I really do appreciate what I have! I often look at my body and think YEH! Looking good! And to me that attitude always seems to be knocked you can’t go around saying “I look awesome today” because people will bring you down (and it does sound kinda knob ish) but I do feel awesome. I’m a healthy weight I have fingers and toes and a mouth for smiling. I constantly feel like the luckiest person in the world (it helps if you dont measure luck by lotto and raffles) and it’s an awesome feeling.
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Such a great post. As someone who at the age of 27 lost her 30 year brother very tragically and unexpectedly, I think we just need to be appreciative of simply being alive and being able to experience life every day! I get so cranky when people moan about being a year older at birthdays when I think my brother was robbed of the chance of having any birthdays over the age of 30. We get one shot at life so why be sad to be older!
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I’m a family photographer, and I wish, with almost every shoot, that I could say this to the mum I’m photographing. It’s so desperately sad that women feel they’re ‘less than’ almost straight out of the gate. Blessed doesn’t even begin to describe the gifts they have, and yet they obsess over something that ultimately doesn’t matter.
I’ve had women come back to me, years later, to have their photos taken again and commented that they wished someone had told them that time marches on and you never get any younger looking. Sigh. I would have, if there was a nice way of saying it. I think you summed it up perfectly, Kirsty
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My partner in crime’s beautiful Grandmother has a wonderful saying – ‘you will never look as good as you do today. Right now’.
She has always said, try and appreciate how beautiful you are today as tomorrow there will be another grey hair or a wrinkle or ……
She is 102.
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What an absolutely beautiful way of reminiscing about the past and the future.
A lady at my daughter’s daycare has reached her ‘second stage of life’, and found a book to enlighten her views on the new phase. She said that whereas she used to think that life was about to end, this book has made her realise that it is only beginning. Now is the time to make plans and make things happen!
I will try and hold on to both takes on aging as I move along!
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What’s the second stage of life? Menopause?
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great post Kirsty!
Mia had a story about Karl Stevanovic’s wife telling her to appreciate how she looked this summer as next year and the year after she would be older and think she didn’t look as good – something along those lines anyway! (Mia might read this and provide the full and proper text!)
I think we never really appreciate how we look at each age and stage. And it’s only when we look back and see how great we look then that we beat ourselves up about it. Looking at old photos recently I did a bit of the same.
I also really loved your recollections of what you were doing at that time of your life, not just how you looked!
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I didn’t appreciate when I was still in my 30s how young I actually was. I do now.
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6 words: youth is wasted on the young!
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Yes! I remember hearing it so often when I was young – but I was too busy worrying if my bum looked big or whether the pimple on my chin would be gone by Saturday. *bangs head against desk*
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I love this!
I am about to have my last 30-something birthday, and I am getting a tattoo. My husband asked me why (although he has plenty of tattoos, he wanted to know would it be something I would regret). I don’t have an answer, really, but it’s something to do with knowing that I will look back at this time in my life as a pinnacle. I am in the best physical shape of my life (just ran a half marathon!), and I’m fulfilling on all my commitments. Not necessarily always happy, but just living full out. It’s great.
I want to mark this place so I will remember it.
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I try to appreciate everyday and live in the now, i know im fortunate but when you suffer from depression and/or anxiety its so hard to adopt this way of thinking :-/
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I can so relate to this article.
I used to be a swimmer when I was a teenager and early twenties. I had a pretty good body back then but I was too shy to appreciate it. I never ever wore a bikini because I was so self conscious.
Now in my 40s, I think, I wish I’d appreciated my figure back then. I had woeful fashion sense and did not make the most of what I had.
I have a couple of colleagues at work who are in their 20s and they are very stylish – I wish I had their confidence at the same age.
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This resonates so much with me! I had this epiphany about a month ago, and im nudging 38. Hope i can help my own daughter come to this realisation a lot earlier and bypass some of the confidence shattering negative body image issues. Those things im most negative about are aspects of my body critiqued by my parents and family when i was about 11-13. I have also made a pledge to myself and my partner to never talk negatively about my own body or thst of others around my kids. Heres to breakong they cycle!!
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My father in law regulary tells me i will look back on these years, two busy kids, school readers, weekend sport, full of attitude, being a part-time worker, wife and mother as the best… I’m not sure, i am just so tired!!
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So, so, so, so true!
I turned 40 this year and most of my friends are around the same age. One friend in particular is always talking about her age in a not-so-positive way and every time she does I remind her that in ten years’ time she’ll look back and see how young she looks now.
Not that it should matter either way anyway, because it’s all part of the process of life and we should accept – embrace! – ourselves at any age.
But those of you who’ve turned 40 know it’s a significant milestone – mostly in positive ways but there is no doubt you’re not 21 anymore looks-wise. I can see my body changing and I admit it’s confronting, but I don’t want to get all hung up about it because in ten years’ time…!!!
And yeah, I was extremely dissatisfied with my body throughout my 20s. Very, very sad to think that now.
Love yourself at any and every age
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What a great reminder take to stop and take stock, we are our own worst enemy and we so don’t need to be!!
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I was just thinking the same thing today about how I should have appreciated myself and my opportunities while I was younger. I should have finished school I should have appreciated my youth I should have held onto friends I cloud have enjoyed being young before commitments and babies came along. I wouldn’t change my life for the world because I love what it has evolved into but hindsight is a funny thing.
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Love. This. Thanks, Kirsty. It’s a reminder that everyone should have. My grandma says it often – she was so paranoid in her early 20′s about her body that she never wore a swimsuit. She said if she had that body now, she would wear one every day. I try to remember that every time I put one on…cellulite and all, I will look back one day and think how hot I was…haha!
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My grandmother used to say “You don’t know how beautiful you are when you’re young”…
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