When I was a child, I frequently heard myself characterized as a "late bloomer." That was a source of shame for me then, but now I embrace it. I hope I never stop "blooming." I met my soul mate, Paul, at age 36. I was 37 when I became a mom for the first time. And at 51, we started a whole new branch of the family. This suits, me somehow. I am comfortable in my skin and at this stage of life; I know what fits.
It reminds me of working with clay. There is something so wholesome and earthy about it. It's sensuous -- and not in a corny, Ghost, sort of way. The clay at first is in a slab, cold and unyielding. The initial task is to warm it up with your hands; to soften it and make it pliable. This takes some time and patience; some kneading, some faith.
Only after the clay is worked and warm can a new creation emerge. What is created is not always what I expected. And it rarely, if ever, looks like I thought it would. Yet it is always true to its nature. Somehow it is exactly what it is "supposed" to be and exactly right.