Who Told You That by Now You Should Have It All Figured Out?

You have heard the line a hundred times. Like a fine wine, like a good aged cheese, you only get better with age.

It usually shows up on a birthday card, written by someone two decades younger who assumes you will find it comforting.

For years I waved it off as the sort of thing people say to soften the math.

Turns out, that worn-out comparison was hiding something true. Past 65, a large share of us measurably improve, in memory, in physical function, or both. Researchers at Yale put some real numbers behind this. There is one condition attached, though.

The Setup You Were Handed Around 40

Somewhere along the way, a deadline got attached to your understanding of life. By 40 you were supposed to have the career sorted. By 50, the finances, the marriage, the parenting, the purpose. At 60, presumably, enlightenment with a pension. Nobody signs this contract on purpose. It seeps in from every direction, and most of us absorbed it without noticing.

So when something still feels unsettled at 52, the reflex is embarrassment. You start to wonder what you missed, why everyone else seems to have the manual. The honest answer is that the manual never existed. The people who look settled are managing the same open questions you are, with better lighting.

What the Research Shows

Here’s where it gets interesting. A 2026 study from the Yale School of Public Health followed more than 11,000 adults over 65 for up to twelve years. Nearly half of them, 45 percent, showed measurable improvement over time in cognitive function, physical function, or both. They got better, well into the years our culture tends to write off.

The researchers, led by Becca Levy, described it as a reserve capacity for improvement in later life. We carry more room to grow than we have been told. And the gains were not random. The people most likely to improve were the ones who held positive beliefs about their own aging in the first place. The story you tell yourself about getting older shapes whether you keep developing or start coasting.

That tracks with the broader science on the brain. The 2024 Lancet Commission on dementia found that cognitive engagement across life builds protective reserve, and that staying mentally active is one of the levers we actually control. At this point in life, learning functions as maintenance for the brain.

Here’s the Catch

None of this happens by drifting. The improvement is real, and it is earned. We have all met the two people who prove the point by default.

The first one has it all figured out, or so they’d have you believe. Every conversation is a verdict already reached. New information bounces off. You can watch curiosity close, and from there, the world only gets smaller.

The second has stopped trying altogether, settled into a chair labeled “this is who I am now,” and treats every new idea as someone else’s problem.

Both have made the same move. They decided the learning was done. And the research suggests that is the moment the gains stop, because the people who keep improving are the ones still treating themselves as a work in progress.

You do know things. You’ve learned plenty, much of it the hard way, and that knowledge is real and worth respecting. Knowing some things and still having more to learn are true at the same time. The trouble starts only when you confuse the first for permission to quit the second.

The Pause Is Part of the Work

Growth is not a straight climb, and anyone who sells it that way is, well, selling something. Some stretches are for moving forward. Others are for standing still on purpose, letting a hard year settle before you reach for what is next. A pause does its own work. It gives you time to rest, process, and integrate what you learned into something you can use later.

I think of the times in my own life when everything changed at once, when I was learning an entirely new set of skills and building something while an old chapter wound down. The forward motion mattered. So did the flat stretches in between, where nothing visible was happening, and the real integration was. Both belong on the same path.

The People Who Keep Getting Better

Curiosity is a primary driving force for discovery and learning, so much so that even Einstein believed it was more important than innate talent. He famously said, “I have no special talent. I am only passionately curious.” Put yourself in Einstein’s company and stay curious. Ask questions. Don’t be afraid to be a beginner at something.

The people who stay sharp tend to surround themselves with others who are also still asking questions, still reading the thing, still changing their minds out loud. That is not a coincidence. Connection itself shows up on the Lancet list of factors that protect the aging brain, and isolation shows up as a risk to it. Staying engaged with people keeps you engaged with ideas.

You were never supposed to have it all figured out. You were supposed to keep going. The cheese was right about one thing, but only for the ones who stay open to the next batch.

At LAYLO wellness, the whole point is building the kind of connected, curious life that keeps you growing for the long haul. If that is the direction you want, come find the rest at laylowellness.com.

LAYLO wellness centers social wellness—supported by mental clarity and movement—to help you live and work with more steadiness, connection, and longevity.

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