The Sentence We Carry | Sixty And Me

the-sentence-we-carry-|-sixty-and-me

A woman over 60 wrote to me not long ago. She had written something for a friend who was leaving for another job. It wasn’t dramatic or elaborate. It was simply honest – an expression of how much she had valued the friendship, how much she would miss her, and how hard it felt to say goodbye.

She wanted the words turned into music.

Not because she wanted to perform.
Not because she wanted attention.

Because she believed she could not sing it herself.

Her brother had once told her she couldn’t sing.

He may not have meant it to last. It may have been teasing, or careless, or just a moment. But the sentence settled somewhere inside her and stayed. Decades later, it still had authority.

Everyone Carries Their Own Sentence

I’ve come to believe many of us are still living inside sentences someone else once spoke.

Sometimes they were small remarks. Sometimes dismissive. Sometimes protective. But over time, they hardened into identity. We stopped testing them. We began obeying them.

You’re not good at that.
That’s not really your thing.
You’re not that type of person.

Instead of simply putting her words to music, I asked her to do something unexpected. I asked her to send me a video of herself singing the song.

Not so I could evaluate her.
Not so I could correct anything.
But so she could do the thing she had already decided she couldn’t do.

She sent the video.

I did not listen for quality. That wasn’t the point. It was her song, sung her way. And there was something dignified in that. A woman over 60, singing words she had written, not because she believed she was “good,” but because she cared.

Nothing dramatic happened. There was no breakthrough moment. But she sang. And the old sentence did not stop her.

My Own Sentence

I recognized her hesitation immediately because I have lived inside sentences of my own.

For years, I believed I wasn’t good enough at certain things in music. I was told singing wasn’t my strength. So I sang.

Not to prove anyone wrong. Not to win an argument. But to find out for myself.

I discovered something important in the process. I could sing. I even enjoyed it. But singing was not where I felt most alive in music. What I loved was writing. Producing. Shaping a song from the inside out.

If I had never stepped into the thing I thought I wasn’t good at, I might never have discovered the thing that truly fit me.

It’s About Knowing Your Options

Sometimes the point of doing something isn’t to master it. Sometimes it’s simply to see where it leads.

At this stage of life, I sometimes wonder how many of us are still obeying opinions that were never meant to become permanent. How many quiet limitations are we carrying simply because someone once spoke them and we agreed?

What people think has always belonged to them.

What we choose to try belongs to us.

Sometimes it isn’t about becoming great at something. It’s about stepping toward it long enough to learn whether it is truly ours – or whether it leads us somewhere else entirely.

A woman sang her own words. Not perfectly. Not professionally. Just honestly.

And sometimes, that is more than enough.

Below is the poem Diana wrote:

I wrote this song for you,
for a happy farewell,
While the music moves and fly
to follow you everywhere.

I sing this song for you
Hoping it will make you smile
I am singing it with Joy,
Just to see your happy face.

I sing this song for you,
and my heart bound it with love
While my hands wave the goodbye
Wishing you only the best.

I sing this song for you,
Knowing your dreams will come true
Very soon for you to reach,
and then happy you will live.

I sing this song for you.
With blessings from above,
Please take it in your heart
Just like the sky will take it too.

I sing this song for you,
Goodbye my dear friend.

Here’s the From Heart to Harmony rendition:

Let’s Have a Conversation:

What sentence do you carry? How does it limit you? Have you worked to abolish it?

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