Congrats on your father's livelihood! Though I doubt an internet *random person* would really matter at this point.
I would hope my father, in Kentucky, would hit a similar stride at 50, though he's 58 or so at this point and is more concerned with watching television or working in one way or another, compared to my mother who is 57 and, while she still works, doesn't care if her job "lays her off" or not, but would rather spend her time with her 30-something husband and experience the world in the way she knows how.
My mother is currently contending with my grandmother, who has some sort of dimensia and is fearful of dying in her 80s after spending years in the middle of nowhere in Kentucky.
It's a great fortune, in my perspective, to have parents who live lives of little regret and live to tell the tale.
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I would hope my father, in Kentucky, would hit a similar stride at 50, though he's 58 or so at this point and is more concerned with watching television or working in one way or another, compared to my mother who is 57 and, while she still works, doesn't care if her job "lays her off" or not, but would rather spend her time with her 30-something husband and experience the world in the way she knows how.
My mother is currently contending with my grandmother, who has some sort of dimensia and is fearful of dying in her 80s after spending years in the middle of nowhere in Kentucky.
It's a great fortune, in my perspective, to have parents who live lives of little regret and live to tell the tale.
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