Turning 40 and embracing a midlife crisis changed my life
By Andrew Dickens
For Andrew Dickens, turning 40 was a wake-up call. He thinks we should all embrace the midlife crisis
Life begins at 40! Try telling that to someone from the 15th century. If they hit 40, theyād be looking over their shoulder for an unearthly scythe held by a guy who always looks slim in black. For them, the phrase would have been ādeath stalks at 40, if you make it that farā.
Luckily, with a fair wind and a little sense, people today have a considerably longer life expectancy: 71.5 years, globally, with a few years extra if youāre born in a developed country, and some bonus time if youāre a woman.
So, while itās patently untrue that life begins at 40, itās true that we have a lot more time after hitting that mark. There’s no race to tick the bucket list, less need to fear the Reaper. This, though, can lead to complacency and procrastination: I donāt need to hike the Inca trail now just because Iām 40. I can leave it to 45. Or 50. 60? Yeah. Or maybe 90, using my stem-cell-regenerated super-anatomy.
More years equals more time to do stuff. Makes sense, right? WRONG!
The wake-up call
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56 (very hilly) kilometres later. The medal doubles up as a bottle opener, by the way.
I donāt care what the latest buzz phrase is. 60 is not the new 40 and 40 is not the new adolescence. 40 is still, statistically, middle-aged. Dress it up in a hoody and trainers if you like, but itās got grey hairs and longer recovery times. We may be healthier, we may feel younger – we probably act it – but we are not younger. If you need a trigger to get things done in your life, this should be it.
It certainly was for me.
When I saw 40 approaching unstoppably across the hills of time, it was a call to action. Iāve written here and elsewhere about my experiences with anxiety and depression and – letās be honest – the subject of mental health is rarely a carnival of positivity. However, this time two of the crappier symptoms combined to produce a spectacular explosion of me doing stuff.
Symptom one: the lethargy, anxiety and self-esteem issues Iād had for much of my life, from teens to thirties. This, most of the time,Ā has prevented me from doing things, always too nervous or too knackered.
Symptom two: a fear of mortality (particularly potent for me, as a godless man). This is my mortality, plus that of loved ones, the human race, or cute animals on nature programmes.
Individually, these two things are sh*tty. But then they collided, causing a thought process along the lines of: āI havenāt done as much as I should have and now Iām even closer to extinction.ā You donāt need to be mad to have a midlife crisis, but it helps. (Mugs, posters and t-shirts available on request.
Midlife crisis? Yes, please!
I embraced that phrase: midlife crisis. Itās mid-life and, if not quite a crisis, itās a pressing matter. So, I did things that I wish Iād done earlier, things Iād planned to do later, and things I didnāt even consider doing before, but when the opportunity came up to do them, I decided my default response would be to say yes. Yes, yes, yes (with the occasional no – Iām not Danny Wallace).
I took my first skiing holiday – and, subsequently, learned to ski. I got my motorbike licence. I quit my job to go freelance. I got married, which also involved proposing. I bought a house. I got a dog. I slept in a capsule hotel. I got naked in public places. I tried surfing (less successful than skiing, but still). I ran a half-marathon. Then I ran a full marathon. Then I ran an ultra-marathon.
There’s more.
I got my eyes lasered. I took a horse-riding lesson. I climbed a couple of mountains. I bought a guitar (I admit, as yet unplayed). I grew a moustache and not for Movember. I took up rambling. I sang with a band. I went to as many countries as I possibly could. I broke a world record. I took up meditation and yoga (both of which have been, temporarily, put down again). I took part in a rap battle. Iāve probably missed something – I should make a proper list – but all this happened in the last five years.
There are still things I want to do, of course, and the list is growing. Unpredictable opportunities will arise and Iāll say yes. And the best bit of all: long term, this new positive attitude became a self-fulfilling prophecy, helping eases those mental health problems. The symptom is now a remedy.
Seize the peony
I even got a tattoo – in Tokyo – of a peony on my left forearm when I was 40. One of the approximately 732 meanings of the peony in tattoo culture is the equivalent of carpe diem, seize the day, the moment. Itās there to remind me not to be a wuss, to say yes, to worry less. Positive thoughts, man.
It wasnāt my first tattoo. That came when I was 19. But it was my first since then and the first on public display, because before then Iād been worried, uncertain of what I wanted and other peopleās reactions. It has since been joined by two more splendid Japanese tattoos on my right forearm: a snake and a group of Sakuras (cherry blossoms), each with its own meaning. Unhidden. Proud. Excellent conversation starters, popular with small children.
If I feel doubt about whether I should say yes to something, I look at the peony. Itās all very simple.
You donāt need a purple flower on your arm, though, just do it. Saying yes is simple. Not saying āmaybe,ā ālaterā or ānot yetā is simple. Worrying about what to say is painful, though. I still do that sometimes and it takes years off.
And you donāt want to take any years off, because none of us is getting any younger.
Three life-changing trips you should say yes to
Say yes to the great outdoors of Norway

Welcome to the land of ice and snow. And fish. And fjords. And glaciers. Basically, loads of stuff. This four-night trip includes a generous serving of Nordic exhilaration, including sea-kayaking, ice-caving, cliff-climbing, RIB boating. It also includes a generous serving of Norwegian cuisine and, of course, some of the world’s most mind-blowing scenery.
Say yes to adventure in Borneo

If you fancy sweating out the muck of city life and also having your eyes soothed by natural beauty, then sign up for this incredible trip to Borneo. Posh hotels are balanced out by jungle camps, kayaking through rapids and caving is countered by spottingĀ orangutans and sipping cocktails on a beach by the South China Sea.
Say yes to sensory stimulation in Argentina

You’ve got five senses (six, if you’re lucky), so use them. On this life-changing trip to Argentina, you’ll taste wine and beef, you’ll feel the cold whip of the wind as you cross glaciers, you’ll see sights you never thought possible, you’ll hear the hustle and bustle of Buenos Aires, and you’ll smell the horse between your legs as you trek through the Andean foothills.



