
This Norman Rockwell painting hangs in my bedroom. I see an “outsider” standing above the crowd, saying what’s true for him. Courage.
Yesterday, standing up took on a new meaning. I had my first gym session with a trainer named Maryna. She is also my friend.
I had visions of free weight exercises, beyond my usual routine of strength training machines. Nope. Our hour focuses largely on me standing up.
I’ve stood up since I was a kid. From a chair, I push down on the arms, or on the inside of my thighs, just above the knee … and up I go. Not yesterday. Maryna asked me to press down with the balls of my feet while leaving my arms dangling. A pure movement – no assistance.
It was new
It was hard!

To do it easily, I need a strong core. I don’t have one. Humbling. And fascinating. I’ve spent 77 years standing up in a Bruce way … and I’m being asked to change. So I can be stronger. So I can continue living in my “fifty steps up” apartment till I’m 90.
I agreed to do it
I’m a work in progress, which is better than not being a work at all. Later in the day, I was jolted awake by the presence of hands on thighs once more. This morning, though, my rising from bed was unassisted.
I now sit in Lloyd Coffee Eatery. Their chairs are comfy … and low. I assess my chances of standing up without my hands as being approximately 0%, with the likelihood of pain 80%.
Let’s give ‘er a go, shall we?
(Praying)
I decided just now that I need emotional support. So I told my story to the woman sitting at the next table. She started cheering me on.
And …
Not even close!
I could barely get my bum off the seat. Nowhere near achieving a vertical body.
However, some of Lloyd’s chairs are higher, the type you’d see in a cafeteria.
So I try again.
Yes!
Piece of cake
The woman smiled.
***
My task is clear. Sometime in the next five years I will rise freely from a soft Lloyd chair. Today is today. Tomorrow is tomorrow.
















