Why do you keep doing this?

Peter Leith is 89 and describes himself as ‘half-deaf and half-blind’, but he has never been one to dwell on his challenges. Why do you keep doing this? continues his series of true short stories and observations titled Aspects of Ageing.

•••

His near-sightless eyes staring straight ahead, the old physio leaned on the heels of both hands and ran them up the long muscles of the prone footballer’s back. The younger man grunted as his back muscles started to relax.

The slightly knotted fingers moved and started to dig into the tense muscles of the upper back, shoulders and neck. Suddenly, the firm pressure was gone and a single finger of each hand started to discover, trace and massage the individual tight sinews until they, too, relaxed.

“God, but that feels good,” said the younger man. “I don’t know why you keep on doing this at your age Ben, but I’m bloody glad you do.”

Ben chuckled and dug the balls of his thumbs into the base of the man’s neck.

“Why do you keep doing it Ben?” the younger man repeated.

After a moment, Ben replied, with another chuckle: “Because it prevents the arthritis from taking over my hands.”

•••

This is one of a series of short stories in a growing collection called Aspects of Ageing.

Do you have a story or an observation for Peter? Send it to sunday@staging.yourlifechoices.com.au and put ‘Sunday’ in the subject line.

Related articles:

Palliative ‘self-care’ group
Offloading Mum or Dad
Scots never forget

LEAVE A REPLY

- Our Partners -

DON'T MISS

- Advertisment -
- Advertisment -

Join YourLifeChoices Today

Register for free to access Australia’s leading destination for expert advice, inspiring stories, and practical tips. From health and wealth to lifestyle and travel, find everything you need to make the most of life.

Bonus registration gift: Join today to get our Ultimate Guide to Seniors Rebates in Australia ebook for free!

Register faster using:
Or register with email:
Sign up with Email

Already have an account?