
This summer I went back to graduate school. One might assume that 5 years of graduate school was quite enough (it definitely was, once upon a time). This time I was part of a social work graduate level class where volunteer older adults met with social work students in small groups after completing in-class autobiographical writing assignments. I am not sure who learned most in this intergenerational pairing. The writing was revealing, but the neglected need to tackle ageism in U.S. culture likely was our most important outcome.
The encore “students” displayed vibrant energy in expressing their views; no shrinking violets volunteered to go back to school. When looking backwards at one’s life experiences, there is perspective to be gained. Each of us has important history and relationship lessons to learn when paying attention to clinging decades of life education in the School of Hard Knocks. It is impossible to escape a variety of knock-‘em-up times — if you are lucky enough to live a long life.
Septuagenarians (ages 70-79), octogenarians (ages 80-89), nonagenarians (ages 90-99), and centenarians (ages 100-109) are revered in many cultures. When Becca Levy, psychologist, epidemiologist and professor at the Yale School of Public Health, spent a semester in Japan, she was amazed to see how differently older adults were treated there. She discovered that centenarians were celebrated as rock stars.
Older adults in America are too often assessed with less than positive attributes. Why do we snicker at stereotypical labels: old farts, geezers, gaffers, codgers, silver tsunami, gray wave, women of a certain age, or “over-the-hill” when milestone birthdays are reached? Birthday cards for encore years are raunchy with oddly positioned and/or tattered-looking individuals holding onto life. A revamp of social portrayals of older adults is overdue.
Showing up in ways to connect intergenerationally is just one solution in combating ageism. Consider attitude-shifting in singer songwriter Bob Dylan’s lyrics from Dear Landlord: “If you don’t underestimate me / I won’t underestimate you.”
Junior citizens may underestimate seasoned citizens because of a negative experience with one or more older adults. Once a bias is formed it is difficult to break down one’s barriers to prejudice and stereotyping. According to Levy (Breaking the Age Code), unconscious ageism is “everywhere,” and starts as young as age 3.
Some individuals are groomed to become adept at putting down themselves. Levy’s 2-decade longevity study of Ohio residents (ages 50+) pinpoints how damaging it is for older adults to hold onto negative beliefs about aging; the median survival rate was 7 ½ years longer for those with the most positive attitudes about aging!
All of us might adopt age affirmations that Dylan offers in this gem (Forever Young): “May your hands always be busy / May your feet always be swift / May you have a strong foundation / When the winds of changes shift.”
Pearls of Peace (PoP) Quiz
213. When have you experienced ageism?
214. What might you do to combat ageism in your community?
I’m on my 3rd hospitalization since successful back surgery. The readmissions have 100 percent been due to gendered agism of Healthcare workers not listening to me.
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I am sorry to hear about your health challenges. Thanks for sharing your scary experience. Bias knows no boundaries; even educated people can hold onto a bias or two. We need more people trained in gerontology.
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Great piece, Jan. Can you imagine what it would be like to have the attitude of the Japanese here!!???
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Good one! Sage advice for Septuagenarians and up.
Thanks!
Kathy
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The sage Japanese seem to understand that aging is natural. I like spiritual writer Thomas Moore’s take on the difference between “growing old” and aging. Passivity marks the “growing old,” as in letting your life just happen. Aging is active: “…a process by which you become somebody real and alive…more spiritually and culturally complex.”
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This is another topic for those 30-second (sic) feel good segments on the nightly (or Sunday Morning) TV shows. Showing people doing good deeds, young, old, physically challenged, sexually excluded, immigrants, the list could go on and on. Let us see marginalized people in positive ways.
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Thanks Jan, for the Dylan quotes! I plan to request that these words become the opener for several groups I’m involved in which meet monthly. When we can honor each other we can learn to honor everyone.
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Did anyone know that today is World Senior Citizens Day…and that President Ronald Reagan signed the papers to declare August 21st as National Senior Citizens Day? Where is the media recognition? The U. S. holds onto ageism in many sectors.
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