Experts say keys to aging include accepting changes and finding meaningful activities
The Art of Aging Gracefully.
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In Nora Ephronâs best-selling book, I Feel Bad About My Neck, she laments the sorry state of her 60-something neck: âOur faces are lies and our necks are the truth. You have to cut open a redwood tree to see how old it is, but you wouldnât have to if it had a neck,â she writes.
âEvery so often I read a book about age, and whoeverâs writing it says itâs great to be old. Itâs great to be wise and sage and mellow; itâs great to be at the point where you understand just what matters in life. I canât stand people who say things like this. What can they be thinking? Donât they have necks?â
With rueful humor, she writes about smoothing her face with Restylane and Botox, reading in large type, and grieving the deaths of beloved friends. Ultimately, Ephron concludes, âThe honest truth is that itâs sad to be over sixty.â
Yes, getting older is rife with emotional landmines, gerontologists say, including fears of losing oneâs independence or getting a serious illness. Aging gracefully isnât always easy, but attitude matters a lot, experts say.
âFor some reason, our society is very obsessed with pointing out negative aspects of aging,â says Susan Whitbourne, PhD, professor of psychology at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. She is also the past president of the American Psychological Associationâs Division on Aging.
But Whitbourne cautions, âDonât get bogged down in all the hype about aging. Once you start thinking about it, it can drive you mad. Thereâs nothing you can do; the clock is going to tick away.â
Happy Camper
Of course, not all seniors are pessimistic. Some, such as Kirt Spradlin, donât care a whit about what their necks look like.
The great-grandfather is one of those vigorous and optimistic elders who astounds his peers. Naturally, he tires more easily and has to take things slower, he says. But having battled prostate cancer, the California man relishes every single month that life affords him. When asked his age, he proudly replies, â79 and a half.â
The former electrical engineer took up a new hobby after retirement: mountain climbing. He has climbed Mount Whitney and Kilimanjaro and trekked to Mount Everestâs base camp. Just last year, he and wife Donna went on a weeklong backpacking trip â just the two of them alone in the wilderness. Donna is 80.
âPeople think weâre nuts,â he says. But for him, aging with a bad attitude is simply out of the question.
The Spradlins have grown old with astonishing grace and acceptance. But depression is a real threat among the old; some drift into isolation, bitterness, and a sense of meaninglessness. Still others put up their dukes, determined to go down swinging. Face-lifts and tummy tucks? Bring it on.
Experts who have worked with thousands of seniors share their insights into how you can navigate emotional challenges in order to age gracefully.
The Old Are Survivors
Itâs true that aging brings hardships, but remember that the old are survivors â a select group.
Wisdom, resilience and a mature perspective are often cited as the hard-won prizes of aging. But growing old itself is an accomplishment.
âBut if you get to be older, you have survived a lot of the threats to your physical and psychological integrity that have affected other people who are no longer around,â psychologist Whitbourne says.
Through good luck or good genes or both, the old have dodged fatal accidents, premature disease, and other things that kill the young. âYou are stronger, and you get to live longer,â she says. âMost people think thatâs a benefit.â
A dose of healthy denial can improve outlook in oneâs later years, she adds. âThe people who do the best with aging arenât thinking that much about getting older. Theyâre not really focusing on whatâs not working anymore. If you sit around mulling over the meaning of existence and how time is running out, youâre building in a scenario where youâre not going to age as successfully.â
Accepting Changes
Accept the inevitable changes of aging, rather than seeing them as aberrant crises.
During the course of his career, Illinois psychologist Mark Frazier, PsyD, has worked with thousands of older people âages 65 to 105,â he says.
Again and again, heâs seen an important key to psychological health: accepting that your life wonât stay the same. Aging changes everyone.
âIf you live until youâre 95 years old, youâre probably not going to be living alone in a beautiful apartment and driving your car to the grocery store and picking up your dry cleaning and walking a mile to the park. But if you know that ahead of time, itâs much easier to manage it,â he says.
âTo age gracefully, one needs to anticipate the changes that are inevitable,â Frazier says. âPeople who think rigidly do not do that. As they encounter the natural changes and health status that are part of aging, these things are experienced as negative and adding a lot of stress and strain to their life. Rigid thinkers tend to get overwhelmed. They canât manage it, and they get depressed.â
âOther people anticipate whatâs going to happen,â he says. âItâs more of a âYes, I knew this was coming and I know that Iâll negotiate my way through it.ââ
Avoiding Stereotypes
Get over your own stereotypes about growing older.
Sue Ellen Cooper, 62, understands Ephronâs dirge about âcompensatory dressingâ and obligatory hair dye. âItâs not disgraceful to mourn the loss of your beauty,â Cooper says.
âBut itâs going. So you may as well do what you can and then forget it because thereâs so much more to life than how you look and what other people think of you.â
Almost a decade ago, Cooper started the Red Hat Society to celebrate women 50 and over. Red Hat now boasts 40,000 chapters in the U.S. and abroad. Most members wear red hats and purple dresses to the groupâs social outings.
But Cooper admits that when she was younger, she harbored prejudice against older people. âWhen I would meet people, Iâd think, âShe probably wouldnât be a potential friend for me because sheâs 20 years older â just these things where we make a split-second judgment on appearance.â
Having met thousands of older women through the Red Hat Society, she has replaced the stereotypical thinking with a positive view of aging gracefully. âFirst impression doesnât tell you a thing. Some of these people have had incredible lives and careers and still have a great sense of humor and a lot of intellect, and the culture will write them off: âOh, sheâs an old lady and sheâs overweight.ââ
âOK, world, here we are: âold women,ââ Cooper says defiantly. âWeâre about gathering women together as they get older and having that companionship and friendship that makes it less scary for women in this culture. Weâre still cool.â
Finding Meaningful Activities
Continue to find meaning later in life.
âRetirement has always been a time when we see people withdraw from their roles,â says Pauline Abbott, EdD, director of gerontology at the Institute of Gerontology, California State University, Fullerton. During this risky time, some older people succumb to depression and a sense of meaninglessness.
âPart of the challenge of aging gracefully is that you have to continue to find things that are important to you,â Frazier says.
That can include travel, spiritual pursuits, hobbies, new social groups, lifelong learning, or recapturing time with family if one lacked the chance during the career years, experts say.
Plan for purposeful activities before you retire, Abbott says. âIt should be a transition. It shouldnât be, âStop work one day and fall off a cliff.â Itâs time to follow where your passions lie.â
Without meaningful goals, âYou get into this whole attitude of âOh, my gosh, this woes me. My memoryâs going, Iâm slow, all I do is go to wakes and funerals,ââ Frazier says. âIf you donât have important things out in front of you, thereâs enough about the aging process that is not positive and you can get caught up in what you donât like about it.â (Katherine Kam)