A Wannabe Ninja Turns 40

I’ve often joked that competing in American Ninja Warrior, with aspirations to compete in Ninja Warrior in Japan, is my form of a midlife crisis. Some men chase women, some men buy a sports car or even a motorcycle, many men divorce their wives out of an ineffable angst about losing their youth, but my particular midlife vice is obstacle courses. I’ve earned quite a few quizzical looks over the last couple of years from people I know when I let them in on the big secret about what I’ve been doing in the little spare time I have, all for a shot at an obstacle course that comes once a year that may be over in one slippery second. It’s hard for some people to understand. I don’t quite understand it all the time myself, but I sure find it fun. I suppose I like it because it symbolizes that at least a part of the little kid in me is still there, irrationally happy to be jumping and swinging around obstacles like a monkey.

Just recently I passed that stereotypical midlife crisis threshold of 40. Even though I resisted it because I hate to be a cliche, I did find myself reflecting a lot about my life at this junction and how the expectations of a younger version of myself would match up with the current reality of my life as I enter my fifth decade. I’ll save you the psychobabble of my personal journey on this, but I realized that my Ninja Warrior pursuit and training generally made me feel a lot better about myself as I assessed the status of things as I turn 40. For me it represented a couple of big positive things – pursuing a passion and keeping my aging carcass from succumbing too fast to the accelerating ravages of Father Time. The absence of either would definitely have been a big negative in my midlife crisis assessment.

Who knows? Maybe without Ninja Warrior I’d be driving a sports car with a legion of cheerleaders in the back right now. Now that would have been horrible. Thanks a lot Ninja Warrior.

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  • NinjaChris

    I’m thoroughly glad there are so many people of different ages and such that compete here… It truly makes it an American competition. We don’t need sports cars or women/fame to remind us why we do this.