(especially of an old person) active; lively.
"he continued to look spry and
active well into his eighties"
synonyms:
|
sprightly, lively, agile, nimble, energetic, active, full of energy, full of vim and vigor, vigorous, spirited, animated, vivacious, frisky, peppy
"isn't
Aunt Helen spry for her age?"
|
I was talking to a few fellow board members before the
meeting when someone asked how Sally was getting on after back surgery. I told
them she was completely recovered and weeding like mad. Then I said “but I am
probably next”. One of the members said something like, “You? You are so spry.”
That word stopped me. Spry? Isn’t that a pejorative for “Old
Fart”? So I looked it up, and sure enough, as the definition above indicates,
old age is almost always associated with “spry”. But wait, the synonyms are
really cool: agile, energetic, frisky etc. All complimentary adjectives. What
is the problem Woody?
It’s this: spry is almost always followed by some variation of
“for his (or her) age”. A qualifier. Sort of like “he is in good shape for the
shape he is in.” Then I thought “get over it Woody. At your age you are lucky
to be able to work, hike, cook, sleep, clean, love, drink wine and think.”
It comes down to this: acknowledging getting older isn’t
always easy. You see the “upside down muscle” under your arms, or the man
titties in the mirror and think “Who the Hell is That?” The good news is that
you are standing in front of the mirror after a nice shower getting ready to go
out for the evening. And really, who the hell cares about your minor aging
deficits anyway? Nobody. Just the moron who lives in your head.
Thanks for reminding me that I am spry, K. Makes me want to go out and
hike and cook and love and drink wine. Not necessarily in that order. (SMILE)
Image: https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/_L1aS0knEnvU/TXWnYoepnPI/AAAAAAAABXU/xEJAP8PSSgQ/s640/IMG_7192.jpg
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