There is something quietly powerful about watching people pushed beyond what they know.
I was thinking about that last evening as I watched Episode 3 of America’s Culinary Cup. The challenge was unusual, even a bit unsettling at first glance, chefs working with ingredients like ants and mussels, paired with fresh produce, asked to create something elegant, something refined. It would have been easy for them to resist, to fall back on what they already knew. But that, of course, was not the point.
The point was adaptation.
At ninety-one, I have come to understand that adaptation is not a single moment in life, it is a lifelong companion. When I was younger, adaptation meant advancing in my career, learning new systems, navigating the pressures and expectations that came with responsibility. In those years, creativity showed up in problem-solving, in leadership, in finding better ways to do meaningful work.
Now, adaptation looks different.
I no longer drive. My computer skills, once sharp enough for my needs, have softened with time. I rely on my children in ways I never imagined when they were young and I was the one guiding them through life. It is, as I have written before, a role reversal, but not an unwelcome one. It is simply another chapter.
And yet, creativity has not left me. It has just changed its form.
Today, creativity lives in my daily writing, in shaping thoughts into something worth sharing with readers around the world. It lives in the quiet discipline of maintaining routines, playing bridge four times a week, staying connected with family, finding small but meaningful joys in the rhythm of my days.
Watching those chefs last night, I saw something familiar. Faced with ingredients they may never have chosen, they had two options: resist or reimagine. The best among them did what life eventually asks all of us to do, they leaned in. They experimented. They trusted that something worthwhile could still be created, even under unfamiliar and uncomfortable conditions.
On the other hand, Aging in many ways, is its own version of that challenge.
We are handed circumstances we did not select. Limitations appear where there once were none. The tools we relied on begin to change. But the question remains the same: can we still create something meaningful from what we are given?
I believe we can. Perhaps not in the same way. Perhaps not with the same speed or confidence as before. But there is a certain refinement that comes with age, a deeper understanding of what truly matters, a quieter kind of resilience.
Those chefs were judged on taste, presentation, and creativity. Life, I think, judges us a little differently. It asks whether we remained engaged, whether we continued to adapt, whether we found ways, however small to keep creating.
And so, as I watched that final cook-off, with its pressure and finality, I found myself less interested in who won and more interested in how they responded.
Because in the end, whether in a professional kitchen or in the later years of life, the real measure is not perfection.
It is the willingness to keep going, to keep adjusting, and to keep creating, no matter what ingredients we are handed.
Personal Note: The Dish that won the culinary cook-off between the two low scoring chefs was my Favorite Dish- Salmon Collar with a Spicy Sauce.
- The Main Challenge: Chefs had to harvest their own farm-fresh produce and combine it with "hyper-sustainable" ingredients, specifically ants and mussels to create elevated dishes.
- The Elimination Battle: The two lowest-scoring chefs entered a head-to-head "ruthless" cook-off. They were required to create a dish in one hour using only discarded scraps and leftovers, such as onion skins, carrot peelings, and stale bread.
- Eliminated: Michael Diaz De Leon. Despite expressing pride in his final dish, he was sent home after the scraps-and-leftovers round.
- Advancing: Notable chefs who moved on include , , and .



