Exaltations in life after sixty

Retirement sounds like ‘retirement’ to many, but in the existence of each being there are personal enthusiasms that revive.

That woman who mischievously smiles on our black and white cover –creative decision of the photographer– exudes an enthusiasm that immediately infects us with a good vibe in these low times we are going through.

I must confess that I know Theresa Grove from my time with hair, that is, my time on television in Ecuavisa, where I was one of the first to receive it, because it came from the Liceo Panamericano, a school to which I felt very close because my mother-in-law was its founder and my children, their students. The Teresita of that time is exactly the one we bring to La Revista in the report by Stephanie Gómez, but do not think that in those pages we are going to get nostalgic and talk about his entire luminous career in Teleview. What Teresa gives us is what she is today, that attitude that no one should ever lose.

The interest in the “little things” that we sometimes let go and that are what finally make it possible to face existence with all its sorrows and joys. Especially now that we are surrounded by a lethal circle of fears and disorders, it is vital to fill ourselves with that oxygen that helps us follow our true paths in life, where our relationships, our goals, our tastes are accentuated. Age is secondary. “All ages have their fruits, but you have to know how to harvest them.” Raymond Radiguet said it, a writer who only lived two decades, but he already knew it… (THE)

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