My Four Fondest Wishes—By Almost everyone 65 or older
FEATURES
- “Crawling Over, Under, or Around Section 132”: The Debate Over Joseph Smith and Polygamy by Daniel C. Peterson
- A Mother’s Memories: Those Things Happen by Maurine Proctor
- The Man Who Entered Alone: How Israel’s High Priest Pointed to Christ by Patrick D. Degn
- An Open Letter to the Mayor of Fairview, Texas by C.D. Cunningham
- Gathering Israel: Special Moments Need to be Shared by Mark J. Stoddard
- Your Hardest Family Question: How can I say “no” and still be Christ-like? by Geoff Steurer, MS, LMFT
- Looking Upon the Serpent by Paul Bishop
- Hastening Now: A Weekly Church Report by Meridian Church Newswire
- The Trojan Horse of AI by Marianna Richardson
- The Fiction of Self-Knowledge by C.D. Cunningham
















Comments | Return to Story
Ronald BarnesJune 7, 2022
At the age of 67, I’ve thought about those things, too. Of course, I want to stay as young as possible for as long as possible. Only time will tell. I would love to leave some kind of lasting legacy, but I know that I won’t. I’ll be satisfied to be remember in a hundred years. Of course, I want safe and successful lives for all of my descendants. I just doubt that I’ll have much influence on that. As for being surrounded by loved ones: My children and grandchildren have their own lives to live. I would love to see them as often as feasibly possible, but they have more to do with their lives than being overly concerned about me. I will have lived my life and I want them to have the same privilege. Let them live it while they can.
JillJune 7, 2022
That upsets me. I married late. I had one child, who identifies as gay and does not want children. Grandparenting will likely never be a reality for me.
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