I ignored my shoulder for two years. Not ignored like I didn’t notice it. Ignored like I noticed it every day and decided it was nothing. A tweak. A twinge. “I must have slept on it wrong.” For two years. Apparently, I sleep wrong every single night.
The shoulder hurt when I reached for things. When I put on a jacket. When I tried to lift anything above chest height. I adapted. I stopped reaching. Stopped putting things on high shelves. Started putting my jacket on one arm at a time, carefully, like I was dressing a mannequin made of glass.
I was fifty-two. Too young for this, I told myself. Too young for shoulders that don’t work. So it must not be real. Must be in my head. Must be something I can outlast.
Then my wife dragged me to a doctor. Rotator cuff. Partial tear. Years of ignoring it had made it worse. Months of physical therapy could have fixed it. Instead, I needed surgery. And six months of recovery. And a story I get to tell about how I’m an idiot who doesn’t listen to his own body.
That was the first one. There were two more after that. Three symptoms I ignored. Three things I told myself were nothing. Three things that turned out to be something. Not dramatic things. Not cancer. Not heart attacks. But things that got worse because I wouldn’t admit they were there.
Here’s what I learned. After fifty, your body doesn’t send telegrams. It doesn’t call you into a meeting. It sends whispers. Little signals. Small things that are easy to explain away. And if you ignore the whispers long enough, they become screams.
Symptom #1: The shoulder that didn’t want to reach
I told myself it was aging. That shoulders just do this. That everyone over fifty has something that doesn’t work, and this was my something. That was a lie. Aging doesn’t make your rotator cuff tear. Ignoring a minor injury for two years makes your rotator cuff tear.
What I know now: a shoulder that hurts when you reach is not normal. A shoulder that limits your range of motion is not “just aging.” It’s a signal. Tendonitis. Bursitis. A tear. Something that can be fixed with rest, with physical therapy, with a few months of paying attention.
I paid for two years of ignoring with six months of recovery and a surgery I didn’t need to have. The surgery fixed it. I’m fine now. But I think about the two years I spent adapting. Shrinking my world. Deciding I just couldn’t do certain things anymore. I did that to myself. My body told me something was wrong. I told it to shut up.
Symptom #2: The fatigue that came on slow
I started getting tired in the afternoons. Not the normal tired. Something deeper. A weight. By three o’clock, I was useless. Couldn’t focus. Couldn’t muster the energy for anything. I told myself it was age. That this is what fifty feels like. That everyone over fifty hits a wall at three.
I started napping. Started drinking more coffee. Started arranging my life around the afternoon crash. This is just how it is now, I told myself.
It wasn’t age. It was sleep apnea. I wasn’t sleeping. Not really. My body was waking itself up dozens of times an hour, every night, for years. I didn’t know. I thought I was sleeping fine. I was tired because I wasn’t sleeping. Not because I was fifty.
The clue was the snoring. My wife mentioned it. I ignored it. She mentioned it again. I ignored it again. It was just snoring. Everyone snores. It’s not a thing.
It was a thing. A CPAP machine. Eight hours of actual sleep. The afternoon crash disappeared. Just… gone. Not because I got more willpower. Because I finally listened to what my body had been trying to tell me for years.
What I know now: fatigue is not normal. Not the kind that shows up every day and doesn’t go away. It’s a signal. Sleep apnea. Thyroid. Anemia. Depression. Something. It’s not “just age.” Age doesn’t make you collapse at three o’clock. Something else does. And if you ignore it, you spend years being tired for no reason.
Symptom #3: The indigestion I called stress
I had heartburn. A lot. After meals. At night. I told myself it was stress. I was busy. I was eating on the run. I was drinking too much coffee. It was my fault. If I just relaxed more, ate better, it would go away.
I managed it. Antacids. Sleeping propped up. Avoiding foods that made it worse. I shrank my life around it, same as the shoulder. I stopped eating things I liked. Stopped eating late. Made a whole system for managing the thing I was pretending wasn’t a problem.
It wasn’t stress. It was reflux. Chronic reflux. And chronic reflux, left untreated, can damage your esophagus. Can lead to Barrett’s esophagus. Can lead to cancer. I didn’t know that. I was too busy telling myself it was nothing.
I finally mentioned it to my doctor. Not because I thought it was serious. Because it came up in conversation. She looked at me like I had three heads. “You’ve had heartburn every day for how long?” I shrugged. “Couple years.” She scheduled an endoscopy. Barrett’s esophagus. Precancerous changes. Caught early. Treatable. Manageable. But if I’d ignored it another few years?
I got lucky. I don’t recommend luck as a strategy.
The pattern
Three things. Three small things. Three things I told myself were nothing. Three things I adapted to. Shrunk my life around. Decided were just part of getting older.
None of them were just part of getting older. They were signals. My body talking. And I was too busy, too stubborn, too afraid of being the person who complains about every little thing to listen.
Here’s what I know now. After fifty, you don’t get to ignore signals. You don’t get to decide that something is “probably nothing.” Because the cost of being wrong is too high. A shoulder that could have been fixed with physical therapy becomes surgery. Fatigue that could have been a sleep study becomes years of exhaustion. Heartburn that could have been managed becomes permanent damage.
I’m not saying run to the doctor for every twinge. I’m saying stop explaining things away. Stop telling yourself it’s just age. Stop shrinking your life around a symptom instead of finding out what it is.
What I do now
I have a rule. If something lasts more than two weeks, I mention it to my doctor. Not because I think it’s cancer. Because I want to know what it is. If it’s nothing, great. Now I know. If it’s something, I caught it early. There’s no prize for being the person who ignores things until they become emergencies.
I keep a list. On my phone. Things I notice. Shoulder hurts when I reach. Tired in the afternoons. Heartburn after dinner. I don’t obsess. I don’t research. I just note. And when I see my doctor, I show her the list. It takes five minutes. It’s saved me more trouble than I can tell you.
Why we ignore things
I’ve thought about this. Why I ignored my shoulder for two years. Why I ignored the fatigue. Why I told myself heartburn was stress. It wasn’t that I didn’t notice. It was that noticing felt like admitting something. That I was getting older. That my body was falling apart. That I wasn’t the person I used to be.
I didn’t want to be the person who complains. Who runs to the doctor for every little thing. Who can’t handle a little discomfort without making it a production. So I did the opposite. I didn’t complain. I didn’t go to the doctor. I handled it. I adapted. I made myself smaller to fit around the things I was pretending weren’t there.
That’s not strength. That’s pride. And pride costs you.
The thing about small symptoms
They’re small. That’s the problem. They’re easy to ignore. Easy to explain. Easy to adapt to. But small symptoms left alone become big problems. That’s how bodies work. That’s how time works. The thing that’s a whisper today is a scream tomorrow.
I think about my shoulder. Two years of whispers. I could have fixed it in two months. Instead, I waited until it was a scream. Until I couldn’t put on a jacket. Until I needed surgery. I did that. Not my shoulder. Me.
What changed
I’m sixty-four now. I don’t ignore things anymore. Not because I’m brave. Because I got tired of paying for my own stubbornness. I got tired of surgeries and recoveries and years of being tired for no reason. I got tired of explaining away things that turned out to be real.
I pay attention now. When something changes, I notice. When something lasts, I mention it. Not because I’m worried. Because I’ve learned. The body talks. It’s not dramatic. It doesn’t send telegrams. It whispers. And if you’re not listening, you’ll miss it.
I don’t want to miss it anymore.
The question
What are you ignoring? What’s the thing that’s been there for weeks, months, years? The ache. The fatigue. The thing you’ve adapted to. The thing you’ve explained away. The thing you tell yourself is nothing.
What if it’s not nothing? What if it’s something? Something small now. Something fixable now. Something that gets bigger the longer you pretend it’s not there.
I’m not telling you to panic. I’m telling you to pay attention. To stop being proud. To stop shrinking your life around a symptom instead of finding out what it is.
The shoulder. The fatigue. The heartburn. Three things I ignored. Three things I told myself were nothing. Three things that cost me more than they should have.
I don’t ignore things anymore. I listen. Because my body has been trying to talk to me my whole life. I just wasn’t paying attention.
Now I am.