Old Enough
You may have read a recent New Yorker article on ageism, Tad Friend's "Why Ageism Never Gets Old", or possibly flipped past it, not wanting to entertain the ominous thought, Do they mean me?
The summary: The ageist person does not like to be around the old, because it reminds them of loss: of competitive zeal, hair, stamina, and ultimately, life. The old are a buzz kill.
An ageist person may like specific individuals: charming Aunt Stacey, or the super-elder whom she met while hiking the Camino del Santiago—but as a group, we are not magnetic.
The astute American writer Edward Hoagland wrote an essay in which he described his fury at becoming hominum ingratum. At family party that involved a recital, a young woman thoughtlessly moved her chair in front of his, blocking his view.
Hoagland found her callousness deeply insulting, but did nothing, unless you count his essay. It is the accretion of such small acts that wears one down.
I say now, I'm old. I could use the euphemism aging, but everybody is aging. Seventy, which I'll officially hit in July, is generally accepted as Oldland. Once you can collect every senior's discount going, why be coy about one's age, or insist that seventy is the new fifty? If you think it's the new fifty, try getting a job interview.
Sure, Hillary wanted to be President at seventy, and the current President is seventy-one, but political life seems to be its own planet, inhabited by Supreme Court justices who make seventy look mid-career. But those are old people too; there's much variation in capacity at this age.
But I digress, another sure sign of hitting seventy: everything reminds you of something else.
If some younger persons don't like me because of my age, that is not my problem, though if you're in the workforce, especially in certain occupations, the notion that your value is inverse proportion to your birth date is worrisome. And costly.
Could the next cultural uprising be #OldToo?
Friend includes a study's three possible solutions to ageism, which includes the caveat that they are unlikely given Western culture:
1. Having the elderly live among us and fostering respect for them,
2. Bolstering self-esteem throughout the culture to diminish the terror of aging, and
3. Calmly accepting our inevitable deaths.
That's a tall order for the already-stressed young ones, so those of us over fifty could take the lead.
We could boycott products that promise to "fight signs of aging"; avoid cosmetic procedures undertaken solely to obscure maturity (side benefit: you'll save money), insist the entertainment industry show some typical old people, not the stereotypes. (I liked "Grace and Frankie" well enough but who wouldn't recover quickly from divorce if she could do so on the deck of a Malibu beach house?)
We might refuse to live in age-segregated housing, and advocate for more services in multi-generational units. (Friend doesn't address the matter, but I find some of the most ageist persons to be old themselves.)
The "bolster self-esteem" part will be an enormous challenge, because modern life rarely does that for any adult; open any popular magazine and you'll be told you must get, upgrade or produce more.
As an old person, I've adopted a new mantra, I'm Old Enough For This. I'm Old Enough to get rid of "stuff" without thinking I should hang on to it; to sit in a park to watch the light change; to listen to every version of a favourite aria. I'm Old Enough to take the time I need to do a task as well as I want.
I am Old Enough to know from experience that age does not necessarily confer wisdom, and that old coots were equally miserable to be around when they were younger, but no one was willing to tell them.
We took our advantage in youth, let's take it now. We're luxuriously Old Enough to walk by a baby and stop to admire her without the parent thinking we are anything other than a person in awe of new life. We are Old Enough to read a hard book without worrying whether we will remember all of its complexity, and after reading, leave it in a bus shelter for someone to discover.
I hope we thank persons of any age who teach us about their world, and should those younger blame us for our mistakes—from introducing plastic shopping bags to getting rid of designated hitters—listen without reflexive defensiveness.
Then, there is #3. Everyone hopes for a good end, and when you are old, it becomes a more substantive matter. I read that Mother Teresa meditated daily, for five minutes, on her death. Personally, I am meditating about dying while taking a tango lesson, instantly and in the arms of someone named Javier.
These days, I am brought up short not just by lifetime guarantees, but even, as with the duvet I just replaced, a fifteen-year one.
In the meanwhile, there is plenty to do when you're Old Enough. So, Mr. Hoagland, tap that young guest on the shoulder and ask her to move her chair, now.
The summary: The ageist person does not like to be around the old, because it reminds them of loss: of competitive zeal, hair, stamina, and ultimately, life. The old are a buzz kill.
An ageist person may like specific individuals: charming Aunt Stacey, or the super-elder whom she met while hiking the Camino del Santiago—but as a group, we are not magnetic.
The astute American writer Edward Hoagland wrote an essay in which he described his fury at becoming hominum ingratum. At family party that involved a recital, a young woman thoughtlessly moved her chair in front of his, blocking his view.
Hoagland found her callousness deeply insulting, but did nothing, unless you count his essay. It is the accretion of such small acts that wears one down.
I say now, I'm old. I could use the euphemism aging, but everybody is aging. Seventy, which I'll officially hit in July, is generally accepted as Oldland. Once you can collect every senior's discount going, why be coy about one's age, or insist that seventy is the new fifty? If you think it's the new fifty, try getting a job interview.
Sure, Hillary wanted to be President at seventy, and the current President is seventy-one, but political life seems to be its own planet, inhabited by Supreme Court justices who make seventy look mid-career. But those are old people too; there's much variation in capacity at this age.
But I digress, another sure sign of hitting seventy: everything reminds you of something else.
If some younger persons don't like me because of my age, that is not my problem, though if you're in the workforce, especially in certain occupations, the notion that your value is inverse proportion to your birth date is worrisome. And costly.
Could the next cultural uprising be #OldToo?
Friend includes a study's three possible solutions to ageism, which includes the caveat that they are unlikely given Western culture:
1. Having the elderly live among us and fostering respect for them,
2. Bolstering self-esteem throughout the culture to diminish the terror of aging, and
3. Calmly accepting our inevitable deaths.
That's a tall order for the already-stressed young ones, so those of us over fifty could take the lead.
We could boycott products that promise to "fight signs of aging"; avoid cosmetic procedures undertaken solely to obscure maturity (side benefit: you'll save money), insist the entertainment industry show some typical old people, not the stereotypes. (I liked "Grace and Frankie" well enough but who wouldn't recover quickly from divorce if she could do so on the deck of a Malibu beach house?)
We might refuse to live in age-segregated housing, and advocate for more services in multi-generational units. (Friend doesn't address the matter, but I find some of the most ageist persons to be old themselves.)
The "bolster self-esteem" part will be an enormous challenge, because modern life rarely does that for any adult; open any popular magazine and you'll be told you must get, upgrade or produce more.
As an old person, I've adopted a new mantra, I'm Old Enough For This. I'm Old Enough to get rid of "stuff" without thinking I should hang on to it; to sit in a park to watch the light change; to listen to every version of a favourite aria. I'm Old Enough to take the time I need to do a task as well as I want.
I am Old Enough to know from experience that age does not necessarily confer wisdom, and that old coots were equally miserable to be around when they were younger, but no one was willing to tell them.
We took our advantage in youth, let's take it now. We're luxuriously Old Enough to walk by a baby and stop to admire her without the parent thinking we are anything other than a person in awe of new life. We are Old Enough to read a hard book without worrying whether we will remember all of its complexity, and after reading, leave it in a bus shelter for someone to discover.
I hope we thank persons of any age who teach us about their world, and should those younger blame us for our mistakes—from introducing plastic shopping bags to getting rid of designated hitters—listen without reflexive defensiveness.
Then, there is #3. Everyone hopes for a good end, and when you are old, it becomes a more substantive matter. I read that Mother Teresa meditated daily, for five minutes, on her death. Personally, I am meditating about dying while taking a tango lesson, instantly and in the arms of someone named Javier.
These days, I am brought up short not just by lifetime guarantees, but even, as with the duvet I just replaced, a fifteen-year one.
In the meanwhile, there is plenty to do when you're Old Enough. So, Mr. Hoagland, tap that young guest on the shoulder and ask her to move her chair, now.
Comments
Mme Là-bas: I can only guess at what your mother means, but I. think that the Boomers, because of their numbers, are making their wants known, as they always have, with force. It's in her face, because so many of us are very publicly buying supplements to (supposedly) reverse cellular ageing, getting Botox, or worried sick about retirement. We are, as Ken Dychtwald calls us, The Age Wave. So she is right, what this cohort wants to talk about gets into the air.
Deb from Vancouver: Good for you for asking for what you want! If I idid not get decent service, I would leave an invisible tip, and explain why to the manager.
Some Swedish housing complexes have floors for older residents (with additional support) but a dining room and coffee shop open to all, so old people can mix (or if they prefer, not). That's more a co-housing model than assisted living or retirement home model.
The phrase "I'm too old for this" has crossed my lips a number of times, I prefer your more positive spin.
My father could not seem to accept or ask for help outside the family, nor can many 80-90 year old parents I hear about from friends. As has been said, this often leads to greater stress on all concerned. I'm hoping to have the good sense to avoid this scenario. That said, I too dislike the idea of age segregation.
Off to read that article, thanks.
As a wonderful geriatric psychiatrist friend told me, "We will age the same as our parents, even if we think we will be climbing Everest." To have a family one love and trusts in the last stretch of life is invaluable. Old age is divided into stages and after 85 or so, as part of the oldest old or attending them, we must enter into a whole other realm of thinking.
Now that I am almost 70, there are a few strategies I use:
1. I say "thank you" in advance, with a genuine and delighted smile, as if the young person was actually intending to open the door for, offer me their seat etc, and I had just "intercepted" their thoughts.
2. The young make somewhat of a distinction between "mature but vigorous, worthy of admiration" and "old and decrepit, deserving of pity or contempt". Sorry, but that is the way it is. Mature but vigorous would be someone like Christine Lagarde, or Gary Grant (a few years ago), and I won't list examples of the last category (I was one myself, when paralyzed and in a wheel chair, so I know that withering look all too well).
3. Mature and well-care for, shiny silver hair, moisturized even though wrinkled skin, well cared for hands and nails, well-fitting clothes with one up-to-date, seasonal accessory, all convey image of comfort and possibly the impression of wealth. Style secret, you can get last season's accessory on eBay for a song.
4. Most importantly, to encourage good relations between the generations, praise younger people genuinely- "you young women are so strong these days!" - eg in response to someone helping you carry your groceries to your car, "great to see young people like yourself at these concerts" - eg start the conversation with a young person seated next to you, maybe they purchased rush tickets, this is their first time there etc.
These are just a few thoughts, I'd be most interested if you have felt the same way.
I certainly agree with keeping ones’s self up. IMO Christine Lagarde, 62, is mature but not old yet, but maybe she is by French standards because she would qualify for retirement benefits. The North American health system generally puts the beginning of old age at 65, many people say 70 and I have friends who insist it is 80.
As for the last point, a sincere compliment to anybody is a kindness. I am brought up a bit short when “for your age” is tacked on but appreciation is far better than the withering looks you endured.
Wendy: Was a toss up between writing that or Ann Richards.
But (I keep reminding friends who tell me we don't seem as old as our parents did to us, my parents and their crowd were more active than many of my age now. They fished, canoed, hunted, skated, swam, gardened- not to mention the housework. (I see my mother up on a ladder changing storm windows.) TV entered their lives only in adulthood and they watched very little except for the men who became addicted to football. And when they golfed, no one used a cart.
They did not stick a screen in front of their face like I am doing right now, and poof, two hours goes by. Most of these people lived well into their late 80s and 90s.
Loved reading this post and all comments.,,especially "sensitive poet". Thank you for such pertinent topics.
At the same time, I think of my father, born in 1094 in Chicago: a two-day weekend was unheard of for working class people. Many of his classmates left formal education after 8th grade, and most after high school. Two World Wars interrupted youth and young adult's prospects (though some benefitted from the GI Bill) So, this "gig economy" is a challenge, but each generation except the cohort coming of age right after WWII had to face precarious employment prospects.
Sounds like, given your remarks about health insurance, you live in the US, where I was born and grew up. Single payer universal health insurance would go a long way toward putting people's minds at ease. I am very happy you look back on your careers with satisfaction and pride; a number of about-to-retire educators I know are fed up. It is great to hear your assessment.
Yes, health insurance makes a huge difference. And thank you for your approach to this complex and difficult topic.
As far as I'm too old - my view is I'm too old for bullsh...and I'm not putting up with it any more and that's been my mantra for a long time.
If they start to treat like a dim dearie, I drop that I dated a punk icon whose name is still recognized. 50-plus years ago little did I know I could weapnize a few dates.