Savoring Summer After 50 (Even When Summer Is Not Your Favorite Season)

On paddle boards and pool days, short trips, the tomatoes, and the magnificent knowledge that fall is coming

Atlantic Ocean

I am going to be honest with you right from the start, which is the only way I know how to do things.

Summer is not my favorite season.

There. I said it. On a lifestyle blog. Just after Memorial Day.

I grew up in the Midwest, where summer meant cool mornings and temperate afternoons, the occasional really hot and steamy day, and more often than not a wind off Lake Michigan that cooled things off even when the temperature climbed. Nothing like the South. But I knew what humidity was.

Summer in North Carolina is something else entirely. It does not slowly creep up on you. Sometimes it just arrives overnight, unannounced. One day the mornings are cool, the afternoons sunny, the windows open for sleeping. And then the next morning the sidewalk feels like a bonfire by the time you finish your morning drinking chocolate. A slight exaggeration. But not by much. And this goes on for months, not weeks, with what seems like no end in sight. The only walking Patches and I do is early, just after the sun peeks out, and well after dinner when we walk with the mosquitoes and the bats.

And yet. As I get older I try to enjoy each season for what it offers rather than wish it away. There are four of them, after all, and one is my favorite. You have heard about that many times if you have been here for a spell. Fall. Glorious fall. Cozy season, plaid season, cinnamon and spice, pots of soup and lots of baking. Clearly I was born for fall. I was, after all, born in it.

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Summer is one of the others. But I can endure it and find the snippets I love. Over the last few years I have been trying to show up for it and enjoy the things about it I actually like. For older adults especially, I think this is one of the simple ways we find our way back to ourselves. Not by overhauling everything. Just by showing up for what is right in front of us.

Here is what showing up actually looks like.

A paddle board on a still lake at golden hour on a summer morning in North Carolina

The Early Morning Is Everything

In summer, the morning is where the season keeps its best self.

Before the heat settles in, before the humidity has fully committed to the day, there is a window, early, requiring some willingness to be awake before you would prefer, when summer is genuinely beautiful. The light is extraordinary. The birds are extraordinarily loud. The garden looks its best, bright and full, before the heat zaps its energy and leaves it gasping for a little shade and some cool air.

We paddle board, Bill and I, and paddle boarding on our lake here is a completely different experience from where we started, which was the Lynnhaven Bay Inlet in Virginia Beach. On the Lynnhaven you paddled with purpose. You fought the wind. You timed the tide. You pulled up onto little sandbars or found the oyster shell islands that appear only at low water and felt like you had discovered something, a bit like Lewis and Clark. We actually named one little island that would pop up every now and then Sacagawea Island. Yes, I know it was Pocahontas who was from Virginia, but we liked to think of ourselves as Lewis and Clark as we paddled through the reeds so tall we could not see over the top. It was exhilarating, and a challenge in a way that kept you very focused on not falling in.

Here on the lake, early in the morning, it is something else entirely. Still water. Quiet air, unless a storm is brewing and then the wind can get quite strong. The peace and quiet of moving through a morning that has not yet been touched by the day. It is one of the best things summer here actually offers, and I go as often as I can.

A short walk in the early morning before the heat arrives is one of the small things that can change the whole shape of a day. If you are a woman over fifty who finds the heat harder than she once did, the morning is your season within the season. Move your walks earlier. Have your coffee on the porch before the day turns. Find whatever version of early summer your place offers and enjoy it.

beach Ball in a pool

The Club and the Lost Art of Simply Being Somewhere

We go to the beach club or the pool two or three times a week during the summer, and every Sunday after mass. I have come to think of it as a little vacation. Part of the summer holiday.

Sometimes I am in the water. Sometimes I am on the side with a beach read, a little time away from my day, enjoying the laughter of the kids and the buzz of activity, or sometimes just the quiet of having the place nearly to myself. There is something about savoring summer not by doing more but by slowing down and doing less, by being fully present in the moment rather than planning the next thing. Friends appear. We catch up and then drift back to our chairs, or sit together in comfortable silence, reading, resting, eyes closed. These are some of the simple joys that summer in midlife actually offers, and I have learned not to take them for granted.

I grew up going to the neighborhood pool and my aunt’s pool. This is not that, and I mean that as the highest compliment to both. Then, the water was cold and the pool was filled with strangers, friends, cousins, noise, games, and the particular chaos of summer childhood. Wonderful. Gone. What the club offers now is something different. The easy companionship of people at the same stage of life. An afternoon with nowhere urgent to be and no small stuff pulling at your attention.

After fifty, the ability to slow down and simply be somewhere is not laziness. It is one of the most important things you can do for yourself. The pool is mine. Whatever yours is, a porch, a garden chair, a bench at a local park near water, find it and go there without your phone.

cafe in Paris with white tablecloths in the spring.

Short Trips and the Gift of Anticipation

This summer is going to be a busy one, and I mean that in the best possible way.

We have trips planned to New Orleans, Amelia Island, Oak Island, and the Midwest to visit family members. Friends and family are coming to visit us as well. Adult children, aging parents, old friends making their way through. Day trips around North Carolina are scattered in between. The calendar is full in a wonderful way that makes summer feel like something to look forward to rather than simply get through.

Everyone one of those trips gives me something to anticipate, and looking forward is genuinely a good thing in midlife. It keeps you oriented toward what’s coming rather than stuck in what is hard. And midlife can be hard. The caretaking, the health worries, the losses that start to accumulate quietly. Having something on the calendar that is just for you, even something small is not selfish. It is necessary.  Travel is the best self care at any age, and I mean travel loosely. You do not have to go far. You do not have to go for long. You just have to have something on the calendar that is not ordinary life. A new place, even a close one, is still a new place. New things have a wonderful way of reminding you that the world is larger than your current view of it.

Short trips are a perfect chance to see something new, travel with people you love, and come home with that particular satisfaction of having gone somewhere and come back. Plan something. Even something small. Especially something small.

strawberries in a brown wicker basket in a field

Seasonal Foods and the Case for Eating Like It Is Summer

I grew up eating seasonally. I also grew up with three television stations, but that is a story for another day.

We ate with the seasons most of my life and honestly still do, for the most part. Fresh berries still warm from the sun. Blueberries, strawberries, peaches from the orchard down the road. Sweet onions. Tomatoes. Zucchini. These are meals in themselves. A caprese salad. Corn on the cob. Fresh berries with cold whipped cream. Simple, perfect, the kind of food that does not need much done to it because it is already doing everything.

For drinks I move toward cold and cool. Fresh squeezed limeade. Lemonade. Sweet tea when friends come. But one thing does not change regardless of the season, and I know people will think it’s strange. My morning drinking chocolate is non-negotiable. Not in January, not in August, not ever. It goes in my French toile cup and that is the morning, summer or otherwise. The limeade is afternoon. The chocolate is sacred.

Rituals are sacred and non-negotiable, especially in midlife.

sunset on the water with birds

The Long Days and What to Do With Them

The long days of summer are one of its genuine gifts, even if I will confess to you that I am the woman who quietly cheers when the days start getting shorter again. There is something about the early dark of fall and winter that feels like permission to come inside, light the candles and stay there. But I can appreciate the beauty of a long summer evening for what it is.

What those long days create is time. Time to sit on the porch after dinner and talk, or put on a little music, or just listen to the symphony that starts up at the end of every summer day. The crickets. The frogs. The particular sound of evening settling in and the day giving a sigh. An after dinner walk to the best spot in the village to catch the sunset, or simply sitting on the hill and watching the glow spread out and fade. A beach day that runs from lunch all the way to s’mores over a bonfire because nobody is ready for it to be over.

Summer has a looseness to it that other seasons do not. Even if you have a job, even if the calendar is full, summer feels a little more free, a little more impromptu. It makes you feel, if you let it, a little like a kid again. Staying up late reading a new book. Watching the stars. Sitting up talking with family and friends long past when you meant to go to bed. These magical moments are underrated in any season. In summer they are practically required.

The small stuff, the things that seem too ordinary to count, turn out to be what you remember. That is true at any age. It is especially true for older adults who have learned, sometimes the hard way, that the small stuff is actually the whole thing.

fall leaves with sun rays

The Magnificent Knowledge That Fall Is Coming

Even knowing I will enjoy the pool, the cookouts, the late nights and the travel, I will still be savoring summer partly because I know what is ahead. The end of one season and the beginning of another. Fall.

Every hot humid day is one day closer to the winds of change. That first cool morning when you need a sweatshirt for your walk. The first glint of color on the trees. The change in the light that happens so quietly you almost miss it and then suddenly you cannot miss it at all.

I am not going to pretend that thought does not comfort me. It does. It is part of the deal.

But here is what I have figured out somewhere in my mid fifties. Every season has something that belongs only to it. And every season in life has someone in it who may not be here for the next. That is not a sad thought, or I do not mean it as one. It is just true, and the truth of it makes the present moment matter more.

The last days of summer have their own particular sweetness when you let yourself feel them. The end of summer is not a loss. It is a threshold. And I have learned, slowly, to stand at it with some gratitude rather than just relief.

Summer has the paddle board on a still lake at six in the morning. It has the tomatoes and the peaches and the berries still warm from the sun. It has New Orleans in August, which is either brave or foolish and probably both. It has the long evenings and the friends who appear at the pool and the limeade that tastes exactly like summer should.

I still love fall best. I am not going to apologize for that. But I have stopped spending summer waiting for October.

That is my true self showing up for the season I was given, not the one I would have chosen.

What does your summer look like this year? Are you someone who loves it, or are you finding your own wonderful way to show up for it? Tell me in comments. 

Have a wonderful day friends.

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14 Comments

  1. Comforting words fill this essay. Thank you. I, too, love autumn best and have a November birthday. I read once that individuals tend to favor the season of their birth. I try, too, to accommodate Summer in the South, but I don’t think I will ever learn to embrace the humidity.

  2. Thank you for this post. I live in Texas and truly hate summer, which is tough because it seems to last forever! I find myself getting anxious in the spring because I know summer is almost here! I will work on my attitude, and I think you are right- savoring the morning outside is the way to go.

    1. Kathy, I was born in the Midwest and I love the 4 seasons as I have mentioned. I lived in Florida for 6 years and I felt like it broke my spirit I missed the 4 seasons to much. I hope that you find some small little joys in the summer in Texas. Tell me about the mornings there, is it cool? What do you like to do, walk, enjoy a coffee on the porch?

  3. I love every season, but Summer is special. I was sitting on the swing on the deck overlooking the lake with my 5 year old granddaughter yesterday. She was soaking wet and wrapped up in a warm beach towel. So cozy. She looked at me and said “It’s pretty. The lake is so pretty.” I knew in that moment that she fell in love with it just like her dad did when he was her age. Just like my dad did the first time he saw it in 1965 when he was on a fishing trip. And just like I did when I was 10. This lake is home to us all (even to my parents who are in their 90’s and live 2 houses down from us) and it shines her best in the Summer. Thank you Elizabeth for your thoughtful essays.

    1. Ellen, I love hearing about your life on the lake. It sounds magical. How wonderful to have grown up there, made memories and now can share them and make new ones with your granddaughter. Enjoy your time with your parents, I have said this before, you are blessed to have them just 2 doors down. And enjoy your time with your grandchildren, these special times are what life is all about. Happy summer.

      1. Thanks, Elizabeth. I do believe that there is magic in ordinary times. I think miracles happen all the time. As I’ve gotten older, I can see and appreciate them more. I know you do too!

  4. Hi Elizabeth, summer is not my favorite month either – the heat, the fire risk here in California, and the summer crowds/traffic! However, like you – I enjoy the morning, the summer produce, and the feeling of vacation. Your paddle-boarding sounds wonderful! I enjoy spending a lot of time outdoors, even if it is just to sit on my patio. I like the long evenings, and going to local parks to walk under their large trees. I do not take any big trips in the summer, but sometimes family members will visit me which is always fun.

  5. The best thing about summer is that it’s followed by Fall! I’m going to make some new summer cocktails, fill the house with summer flowers and entertain in a more casual, spontaneous way!

    1. Patrice, I could not agree more! Do share your summer cocktail recipes, I personally love any cocktail that has limes and in fact have a favorite that I make on hot summer weekends. Summer flowers, spontaneous gatherings are all great ideas!

  6. Ok Elizabeth..where did you go to practice paddle boarding? We have not tried that yet. We both can swim of course but I am so fair skinned that I don’t do the beach or pool much anymore as I just fry plus the heat and humidity are things my body seems to not deal with at all anymore…so ya got me thinking..maybe a paddle board activity? I just don’t do snakes either so my fear of falling into the lake makes me a bit anxious..I’m being way too dramatic I know…
    Growing up poor in the Midwest where humidity is king plus no air conditioning made me wish to never be without it again. My husband and I have spent so many years searching for that special retirement place that would be near walking to quaint cafes, shops and maybe a music venue..way too much time looking for something …so today I refuse to focus on tomorrow and just do today…our home taxes continue to rise as we built in a rapidly growing community close to his work, so that leaves the question will we be able to even afford to stay here? Well, I refuse to not take today as a blessing any longer but to love where we are…we actually live within walking to wonderful eateries and our small town of Westfield IN is growing but in a nice way. Being close to your doctors and heart center is also a huge plus. I love my little flower garden I’ve made and we have nice (younger though) neighbors. ( I so wish we had others closer to our age here)…so even as my husband works 7 days a week, including all holidays hoping to fully retire in a couple years..maybe this is home? I so dislike the heat and humidity that many coastal areas deal with..I love Maine! (listening to the loons) but living there would be more costly so …here it is..for now..
    I was born on Thanksgiving day and as said before those of us born in the fall love the fall. Cozy warm days cuddled up with a book or good movie is the best.

    Please tell..how do you make your cup of chocolate? Do you make your own or buy it? Sounds wonderful. I love my cup of vanilla bean coffee with cinnamon and vanilla creamer.

  7. Hi Elizabeth,
    It’s so good to hear that you are approaching summer with a different attitude and mind set. I appreciate you do not enjoy summer, you have so many things to look forward to and it sounds like you “live in comfort and ease.” We do too, thank goodness for air conditioning because we live in AZ. No, I do not look forward to our oppressive harsh summer heat. I try to make the best of it.
    We will be attending our local musical theater this summer and throughout the year. The performers are young and extremely talented on every level you can think of. I will also be doing my creative crafting, reading, and my new-found-friend thanks to my wonderful dear husband he has introduced me to the world of puzzles. It’s helped me to gain a new level of patience doing something like this. Also it’s ok not to have a big puzzle figured out fast. That being said it’s helped me to learn to not be so hard on myself. Recovering perfectionist, day at a time, and it’s all ok.
    New Orleans is so much fun, we went many years ago.
    I love that you both paddle board. I think that takes lots of skill, very impressive. A peaceful thing to do.

  8. Elizabeth, summer is also not my favorite season, and like you I live in North Carolina. I grew up just north of New York City and lived ten years of my adult life upstate in Albany. In upstate NY summers are glorious–warm days and cool mornings and evenings–and are precious because they are short. I don’t need to tell you how long a NC summer can seem! My favorite season is fall and in NC the fall weather in my birthday month, November, can be beautiful.

    1. Maggie, November is a popular month in NC! I too love it. Summer seems very long here when there is no break in the heat or humidity.
      NY summers sound just like the Midwest.
      I hope that you have a wonderful day!

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