I have been
retired for a year now, which I can hardly believe myself! So I decided it was time to branch out and
participate in some additional clubs, looking to make new friends who have
similar interests, and trying to enjoy my life to the fullest. It seems to me, retirement is a time to enjoy
all the things you never had time to do when you worked, right? Retirement is
wonderful to me; it’s doing nothing without worrying about getting caught at
it! <Grin>
I am still
in the honeymoon stage; I drive through the gates and can’t believe I live
here. It’s like living full time at a vacation resort; seriously we really do
love it here. I think that the three grand essentials to happiness
in this life are something to do, something to love, and something to hope for.
Those
of you who follow my blog, or in the very least have read it a few times, know
I truly enjoy people watching and observing the people in my community, in whatever
social environment I find myself. I
have to say that this months topic I personally experienced, which both hurt and fascinated me: Mean
Girls, or cliques, in retirement. Really!
<Grin> It made me shiver as my Spidey senses were once again proven right;
here's a secret, I have discovered this place is full of cliques. Yes really, with 60,70, 80 and 90 year old's. It seems even women in retirement continue to
try and reinvent themselves, and they either let you into the inner
circle or they don’t. I have no idea
what makes them decide you are in or out, the only thing I can figure is
perhaps you are an outsider because you are not the original people who moved
here 10-25 years ago. I have also
noticed that the same people seem to be in a lot of clubs, and the leader of
the pack in each seems to be from one of these cliques, and they are always at the center of the club
making all the rules etc.
I am so
sad to report to you some of them are just unkind, thoughtless women who appear
to have a selfish pattern of behavior; you know the kind who band together leaving
others out entirely. One good thing (?)
I noticed is that they don’t seem to discriminate between men and women; it
appears that no one is off limits to them!
For some
reason, I have become fascinated in observing these women within these social
situations and within their cliques.
Always shaking my head and ginning to myself as I watch these senior/grown women, vying to be the center of attention. Reality check, OMG its High School all over
again!
The more I researched this subject, the more
puzzled I became, perhaps the experts are correct and we may just be neurologically hardwired to
seek out people like ourselves. It
certainly appears so to me, people seem to start forming cliques as soon as they’re
old enough to know what acceptance feels like. They bond together based on
anything that they have in common; such as music preference, sports, race,
gender, the block that they grew up on, or in the case of retirement, the clubs.
I can attest from my personal experiences that women are naturally competitive, (Ya think?) <Grin> and that may be what motivates women to form cliques at an early age. With the cliques in high school the only thing harder than getting in, was staying in. Not so with the senior cliques - the hard part is getting in; once you’re in, I am thinking you’re there for life. <Grin>
I can attest from my personal experiences that women are naturally competitive, (Ya think?) <Grin> and that may be what motivates women to form cliques at an early age. With the cliques in high school the only thing harder than getting in, was staying in. Not so with the senior cliques - the hard part is getting in; once you’re in, I am thinking you’re there for life. <Grin>
As you can
tell I am trying to approach this with humor, as I am inclined to do, yet I must confess there
are other times, when I am more inclined to be more introspective; the times
that I find things like this sad and hurtful, especially when observing the
faces of the people they have been mean to. What truly surprises me is that at this age, 60, 70, 80, or
90-years old, well I’m thinkin’ that they should be more worried about what they
will have to answer for in heaven than what people here think of them? Just
sayin’ (Grin). It seems to me that they
of all people should be aware that life is really short and you should be kind to
others. But alas, not the case, and let
me tell you this was an eye opener; these ladies really show rude exclusivity
and thoughtless cliquishness every day! Phew, what is going on here, you may well
ask? Is this reminding anyone of the movie
Mean Girls, if so you are spot on!
OK, OK, some of you are saying or asking yourself what is a Mean Girl? It’s hard to pinpoint an exact definition, but I think most of us can agree on the idea that they are “women, who use passive-aggressive or outright aggressive tactics to shame, humiliate, ostracize, or hurt other women, often with the intention of making themselves look better by comparison,” I think it certainly fits the Mean Girl stereotype. In my opinion mean girls are in short, bullies whose target is primarily other women!
I saw this
on the Internet and thought it fitting-here are some signs that you may be a
grown up Mean Girl:
- You're never pleased - no matter what happens in your life.
- You always have something to be mad or complain about.
- You're just never happy with anything.
- 80-90 percent of your conversation consists of talking about other people.
- The past was always the best times of your life.
- You find it physically painful to compliment other women.
- You look for weakness in others…and you pounce.
It does cause me to laugh when I see senior ladies (I use the term oldies, or seniors
with love as I too am amongst their number whether they acknowledge me or not) acting
and behaving like they are still in high school. Seriously, when I worked I found gossip to be
entertaining; occasionally I heard the most fascinating things about myself that
I never knew. <Grin> Now it’s just darn right sad to see it still going
on at this stage of my life.
I observed a
group openly talking about going somewhere, they asked me to go, and I promptly
declined, while this other lady kept asking when they were going, only to be
ignored. I have viewed this type of scenario more times than I would like to
tell you about. Then on another instance I observed a group sitting at a table,
and the lady asked politely if the seat was taken, and they said yes, when in
actuality it wasn’t, I kept an eye on it and no one ever took that seat. Then there was the lady who stopped by to say
Hi, only to have them say Hi, and abruptly turn their backs on her and continue
their conversation. So rude!
On another
instance I noted that one person really wanted to be on a committee, well first
she was in, then she was out; it seemed one of the committee women had a friend
that wanted in, or they decided they didn't like this particular candidate. It was sad to watch the
disappointment and hurt of the lady who was originally in only to be told she
didn’t make it. Whether you call this politics, cliquishness, it still
seems to be prevalent in the world of senior citizens.
So what do
you do if you come into this "Mean Girl” adult syndrome? Well you remind yourself that confident,
secure people do not act in a thoughtless and exclusionary way; and that these kinds
of people gravitate to one another. When you get right down to it, their
behavior is self-hexing, as in Karma.
How you treat people, and what you do to people will always come back to
you. And I prefer to live by the rule that no one can hurt me without my
permission. I won’t let them taint me, as
I believe that who I am is measured by my kindness; my education and
intellect by my modesty; and my real caliber, the who I am inside, is measured
by the consideration and tolerance I have for others.
One last thought that I explored, was, could this be a generational thing, after all the majority of the people could be my parents, maybe much the same as Ephebiphobia; the fear of youth. First coined as the "fear or loathing of teenagers," today the phenomenon is recognized as the "inaccurate, exaggerated and sensational characterization of young people" in a range of settings around the world. Seriously if you are in your early 60's they refer to you as a kid LOL.
One last thought that I explored, was, could this be a generational thing, after all the majority of the people could be my parents, maybe much the same as Ephebiphobia; the fear of youth. First coined as the "fear or loathing of teenagers," today the phenomenon is recognized as the "inaccurate, exaggerated and sensational characterization of young people" in a range of settings around the world. Seriously if you are in your early 60's they refer to you as a kid LOL.
I think that
about covers things. <Breathe and Grin>. My take away on this is: I choose
not to socialize with the Mean Girls, giving them very little fodder for their
gossip. If this means I am not a participant, then so be it. As with any kind
of mean girl, or anyone who bullies anyone, there’s always a reason for it.
There is that sadness in them or insecurity that makes them feel the need to
exclude, gossip or hurt other people.
The fact is people gossip, because people are inherently insecure, and
as a result of their insecurities they talk about other people. They point out flaws in other people to feel good about themselves.
It seems this is present at any age or social class. My guess is that no matter where you are in your life, or whatever set of people you’re with, it all still breaks down like high school does. You have social cliques, you have the people you get along with, the people you don’t and the people you are ambivalent about. I choose to remember that life is short and we never have enough time for gladdening the hearts of those who travel the way with us, so I say “make haste to be kind.”
It seems this is present at any age or social class. My guess is that no matter where you are in your life, or whatever set of people you’re with, it all still breaks down like high school does. You have social cliques, you have the people you get along with, the people you don’t and the people you are ambivalent about. I choose to remember that life is short and we never have enough time for gladdening the hearts of those who travel the way with us, so I say “make haste to be kind.”
And so I
leave you with the words of Gandhi, “First they ignore you, then they laugh at
you, then they fight you, then you win.” I thank you again for taking this retirement journey with me,
or as I refer to it, “my longest
coffee break." I'm just
sayin’…
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