Two Indianapolis residents recently celebrated milestone birthdays that carried them even further into their 100s. Elmon Myers turned 105 on March 12, and Sarah Wilson turned 104 on March 14.
When it comes to the secret for living such a long life, if Wilson knows, she wouldnāt share.
āThatās my business,ā she said at her birthday party at Community Nursing and Rehabilitation.
Wilson, who used to be a nursing assistant at Wishard Memorial Hospital, gathered that day with her friends and family to reminisce on a life well lived. Her family said she loved dancing growing up and was even better at it than those who were supposedly trained and coached. At her 103rd birthday party last year, Wilson stuck out her tongue for a photo, showing the vibrant woman everyone knew was just turning a year older, not changing.
āSheāll tell you what sheās thinking,ā Wilsonās daughter, Barbara Jones, said. āShe donāt bite her tongue about anything.ā
While waiting for the nursing home staff to serve the cupcakes, Wilsonās other daughter, Norma Harris, arrived and she sat by her mother to hand her a card.
āHow you doinā, mama?ā she asked through tears.
Wilson, known to speak her mind, said how she was doing: āHungry.ā
āI just thank God that sheās still in her life,ā Jones said, āalthough itās not the way I would like it. [Iād like] for all of us to be together, but at least weāre still here and can still see each other.ā
Myers, a former construction worker who helped his father build the family home, was not as coy as Wilson when asked how heās managed to live so long.
āThe lord Jesus Christ,ā he said. āThe best you can get. I donāt care where youāre going, heās better than anyone.ā
Myers, one of 15 children, grew up in a poor family and attended Crispus Attucks High School, where he graduated in 1936. He would sometimes have to wear his motherās shoes to walk to school because āwe didnāt have nothinā.ā One day, he didnāt wear any shoes in the morning, but he had to run home when school got out because it had started snowing. Myers was featured in the documentary, āAttucks: The School That Opened a City,ā but said he was the worst among his siblings in school.
āI was about the dumbest one in the bunch,ā he said. āI couldnāt spell worth a dime.ā
What Myers could do was math, and he was also good in shop class. He enjoyed making stools and chairs and tables. Myers went into construction with his father and built 28 homes in the city.
Myersā daughter, Elinor Nelson, said she remembered her father always doing his best to provide for the family, and said one of her favorite memories is when he would wake up her and her siblings in the morning to appreciate life.
āHe would always make us get up certainly for school, but on a Saturday,ā she said. āāGet up. If you donāt do anything, get up and see the sun rise. Get up and do something.āā
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Contact staff writer Tyler Fenwick at 317-762-7853. Follow him on Twitter @Ty_Fenwick.
Sarah Wilson turned 104 years old March 14 and celebrated with friends and family at Community Nursing and Rehabilitation. (Photo/Tyler Fenwick)





