I list them as options in a “ToDo” list so that I can choose what I want do.
Best, Jay
Welcome to My World!
I list them as options in a “ToDo” list so that I can choose what I want do.
Best, Jay
I don’t have a plan. I can buzz for an ambulance and go to a hospital
I love attorneys for the prosecution as opposed to the defense because of lots of reasons in employment law!
Best, Jay
I love books of all kinds and people like to browse in books. Old books and new books and stuff like that!!
Best, Jay
PS-and usually buy one or two!!
My face and body are with me all of the day and night!!! Haha! I don’t need a lot more!!!
Best, Jay
I hope I can make someone feel hopeful about life and want to get better and better about living. It’s hard to be optimistic but so miserable otherwise. I know because I have been living for a very long time and I know.
Best, Jay
Waking up!! Having breakfast! Looking forward to the day!! The weather ! The sky ! Everything !!
Best, Jay
Best, Jay
One month before her 95th birthday, Patricia Routledge wrote something that still gently echoes:*
“I’ll be turning 95 this coming Monday. In my younger years, I was often filled with worry — worry that I wasn’t quite good enough, that no one would cast me again, that I wouldn’t live up to my mother’s hopes. But these days begin in peace, and end in gratitude.”
My life didn’t quite take shape until my forties. I had worked steadily — on provincial stages, in radio plays, in West End productions — but I often felt adrift, as though I was searching for a home within myself that I hadn’t quite found.
At 50, I accepted a television role that many would later associate me with — Hyacinth Bucket, of Keeping Up Appearances. I thought it would be a small part in a little series. I never imagined that it would take me into people’s living rooms and hearts around the world. And truthfully, that role taught me to accept my own quirks. It healed something in me.
At 60, I began learning Italian — not for work, but so I could sing opera in its native language. I also learned how to live alone without feeling lonely. I read poetry aloud each evening, not to perfect my diction, but to quiet my soul.
At 70, I returned to the Shakespearean stage — something I once believed I had aged out of. But this time, I had nothing to prove. I stood on those boards with stillness, and audiences felt that. I was no longer performing. I was simply being.
At 80, I took up watercolor painting. I painted flowers from my garden, old hats from my youth, and faces I remembered from the London Underground. Each painting was a quiet memory made visible.
Now, at 95, I write letters by hand. I’m learning to bake rye bread. I still breathe deeply every morning. I still adore laughter — though I no longer try to make anyone laugh. I love the quiet more than ever.
I’m writing this to tell you something simple:
Growing older is not the closing act. It can be the most exquisite chapter — if you let yourself bloom again.
Let these years ahead be your treasure years.
You don’t need to be famous. You don’t need to be flawless.
You only need to show up — fully — for the life that is still yours.
With love and gentleness,
— Patricia Routledge
She is Lots of fun! Laughs and jokes and is very positive!!! You WILL LIKE her!
Best, Jay
| WRITTEN BY KRAGE
Put a pop of poetry in your day!
( ? )
… without pretension since 1995.
A group of poets and poetry readers.
I write poetry to express what's on my mind or how I feel
haiku + images
Finding Your Words
Supporting and promoting poets and poetry in New Zealand
Dear Stranger
Serving a little poetic nourishment Monday thru Friday and featuring a Short Play Saturday Matinee to read.
Your sole poetry school
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The days of our lives
Welcome to My World!
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MAKING LIFE BETTER
SAG-AFTRA Actor, WordPress Presenter, & Public Speaker