I hadn’t heard from Grace for several years and her email today surprised me. She and I dated briefly, but we hadn’t stayed in touch. Her message wasn’t long — and she didn’t seem to really want anything special — but one section really struck me.
“I’m turning 31 next week and I feel so old,” she wrote. “It was hard when I turned 30 last year and I didn’t think I’d feel this way again this year, but I do. I hate feeling this old, like everybody knows I’m not young and pretty anymore. I’m not sure what I expected, but life doesn’t turn out like I thought it would.”
This was the second time in the last month that I’d heard a woman express uneasiness about celebrating a birthday. That left me thinking again about how we see youth and age and wisdom and beauty in modern culture.
Our culture has a lot of things backwards when it comes to values, but this one seems especially dangerous. Cultures used to teach their people to give value and respect to age and wisdom, but as images have come to dominate western culture, we have reversed everything.
We glorify youthful appearance in ways never known in human history — and we’re eager to write off the wisdom of those who have finally experienced enough of life to have insight and understanding.
Our warped cultural programming leaves us scared of what we see in our faces when we look into mirrors. And it leaves us yearning for the younger years of our lives — when we were the most ignorant and foolhardy.
These warped cultural values are making a lot of individuals miserable today.

Changes are destroying culture, but we can build beautiful dream
Correcting an old error: there’s no such thing as ‘We the People’
FRIDAY FUNNIES
If you were once a nerdy outsider, you need to go see ‘Ender’s Game’
I don’t like most people in TV ads, but I can’t tell if it’s them or me
My friends stepped up in a big way when I needed their help for Bessie
AUDIO: We lose the love we need by letting imperfections scare us
2-day-old baby reminds me that miracles still happen every day